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Doppler effect

The Doppler effect or Doppler shift (or simply Doppler, when in context)[1][2] is the change in frequency of a wave in relation to an observer who is moving relative to the wave source.[3] It is named after the Austrian physicist Christian Doppler, who described the phenomenon in 1842.

Change of wavelength caused by motion of the source.
An animation illustrating how the Doppler effect causes a car engine or siren to sound higher in pitch when it is approaching than when it is receding. The red circles represent sound waves.

A common example of Doppler shift is the change of pitch heard when a vehicle sounding a horn approaches and recedes from an observer. Compared to the emitted frequency, the received frequency is higher during the approach, identical at the instant of passing by, and lower during the recession.[4]

The reason for the Doppler effect is that when the source of the waves is moving towards the observer, each successive wave crest is emitted from a position closer to the observer than the crest of the previous wave.[4][5] Therefore, each wave takes slightly less time to reach the observer than the previous wave. Hence, the time between the arrivals of successive wave crests at the observer is reduced, causing an increase in the frequency. While they are traveling, the distance between successive wave fronts is reduced, so the waves "bunch together". Conversely, if the source of waves is moving away from the observer, each wave is emitted from a position farther from the observer than the previous wave, so the arrival time between successive waves is increased, reducing the frequency. The distance between successive wave fronts is then increased, so the waves "spread out".

For waves that propagate in a medium, such as sound waves, the velocity of the observer and of the source are relative to the medium in which the waves are transmitted.[3] The total Doppler effect may therefore result from motion of the source, motion of the observer, or motion of the medium. Each of these effects is analyzed separately. For waves which do not require a medium, such as electromagnetic waves or gravitational waves, only the relative difference in velocity between the observer and the source needs to be considered. When this relative velocity is not negligible compared to the speed of light, a more complicated relativistic Doppler effect arises.

History

 
Experiment by Buys Ballot (1845) depicted on a wall in Utrecht (2019)

Doppler first proposed this effect in 1842 in his treatise "Über das farbige Licht der Doppelsterne und einiger anderer Gestirne des Himmels" (On the coloured light of the binary stars and some other stars of the heavens).[6] The hypothesis was tested for sound waves by Buys Ballot in 1845.[p 1] He confirmed that the sound's pitch was higher than the emitted frequency when the sound source approached him, and lower than the emitted frequency when the sound source receded from him. Hippolyte Fizeau discovered independently the same phenomenon on electromagnetic waves in 1848 (in France, the effect is sometimes called "effet Doppler-Fizeau" but that name was not adopted by the rest of the world as Fizeau's discovery was six years after Doppler's proposal).[p 2][7] In Britain, John Scott Russell made an experimental study of the Doppler effect (1848).[p 3]

General

In classical physics, where the speeds of source and the receiver relative to the medium are lower than the velocity of waves in the medium, the relationship between observed frequency   and emitted frequency   is given by:[8]

 
where
  •   is the propagation speed of waves in the medium;
  •   is the speed of the receiver relative to the medium, added to   if the receiver is moving towards the source, subtracted if the receiver is moving away from the source;
  •   is the speed of the source relative to the medium, added to   if the source is moving away from the receiver, subtracted if the source is moving towards the receiver.

Note this relationship predicts that the frequency will decrease if either source or receiver is moving away from the other.

Equivalently, under the assumption that the source is either directly approaching or receding from the observer:

 
where
  •   is the wave's velocity relative to the receiver;
  •   is the wave's velocity relative to the source;
  •   is the wavelength.

If the source approaches the observer at an angle (but still with a constant velocity), the observed frequency that is first heard is higher than the object's emitted frequency. Thereafter, there is a monotonic decrease in the observed frequency as it gets closer to the observer, through equality when it is coming from a direction perpendicular to the relative motion (and was emitted at the point of closest approach; but when the wave is received, the source and observer will no longer be at their closest), and a continued monotonic decrease as it recedes from the observer. When the observer is very close to the path of the object, the transition from high to low frequency is very abrupt. When the observer is far from the path of the object, the transition from high to low frequency is gradual.

If the speeds   and   are small compared to the speed of the wave, the relationship between observed frequency   and emitted frequency   is approximately[8]

Observed frequency Change in frequency
 
 

where

  •  
  •   is the opposite of the velocity of the receiver relative to the source: it is positive when the source and the receiver are moving towards each other.
Proof

Given  

we divide for  

 

Since   we can substitute the geometric expansion:

 

Consequences

With an observer stationary relative to the medium, if a moving source is emitting waves with an actual frequency   (in this case, the wavelength is changed, the transmission velocity of the wave keeps constant; note that the transmission velocity of the wave does not depend on the velocity of the source), then the observer detects waves with a frequency   given by

 

A similar analysis for a moving observer and a stationary source (in this case, the wavelength keeps constant, but due to the motion, the rate at which the observer receives waves and hence the transmission velocity of the wave [with respect to the observer] is changed) yields the observed frequency:

 

Assuming a stationary observer and a source moving at the speed of sound, the Doppler equation predicts a perceived momentary infinite frequency by an observer in front of a source that is traveling at the speed of sound. All the peaks are at the same place, so the wavelength is zero and the frequency is infinite. This overlay of all the waves produces a shock wave which for sound waves is known as a sonic boom.

When the source moves faster than the wave speed the source outruns the wave. The equation gives negative frequency values, which have no physical sense in this context (no sound at all will be heard by the observer until the source passes past them).

Lord Rayleigh predicted the following effect in his classic book on sound: if the observer were moving from the (stationary) source at twice the speed of sound, a musical piece previously emitted by that source would be heard in correct tempo and pitch, but as if played backwards.[9]

Applications

Acoustic Doppler current profiler

An acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) is a hydroacoustic current meter similar to a sonar, used to measure water current velocities over a depth range using the Doppler effect of sound waves scattered back from particles within the water column. The term ADCP is a generic term for all acoustic current profilers, although the abbreviation originates from an instrument series introduced by RD Instruments in the 1980s. The working frequencies range of ADCPs range from 38 kHz to several Megahertz. The device used in the air for wind speed profiling using sound is known as SODAR and works with the same underlying principles.

Robotics

Dynamic real-time path planning in robotics to aid the movement of robots in a sophisticated environment with moving obstacles often take help of Doppler effect.[10] Such applications are specially used for competitive robotics where the environment is constantly changing, such as robosoccer.

Sirens

Sirens on passing emergency vehicles.

A siren on a passing emergency vehicle will start out higher than its stationary pitch, slide down as it passes, and continue lower than its stationary pitch as it recedes from the observer. Astronomer John Dobson explained the effect thus:

The reason the siren slides is because it doesn't hit you.

In other words, if the siren approached the observer directly, the pitch would remain constant, at a higher than stationary pitch, until the vehicle hit him, and then immediately jump to a new lower pitch. Because the vehicle passes by the observer, the radial velocity does not remain constant, but instead varies as a function of the angle between his line of sight and the siren's velocity:

 
where   is the angle between the object's forward velocity and the line of sight from the object to the observer.

Astronomy

 
Redshift of spectral lines in the optical spectrum of a supercluster of distant galaxies (right), as compared to that of the Sun (left)

The Doppler effect for electromagnetic waves such as light is of widespread use in astronomy to measure the speed at which stars and galaxies are approaching or receding from us, resulting in so called blueshift or redshift, respectively. This may be used to detect if an apparently single star is, in reality, a close binary, to measure the rotational speed of stars and galaxies, or to detect exoplanets. This effect typically happens on a very small scale; there would not be a noticeable difference in visible light to the unaided eye.[11] The use of the Doppler effect in astronomy depends on knowledge of precise frequencies of discrete lines in the spectra of stars.

Among the nearby stars, the largest radial velocities with respect to the Sun are +308 km/s (BD-15°4041, also known as LHS 52, 81.7 light-years away) and −260 km/s (Woolley 9722, also known as Wolf 1106 and LHS 64, 78.2 light-years away). Positive radial velocity means the star is receding from the Sun, negative that it is approaching.

Redshift is also used to measure the expansion of space, but this is not truly a Doppler effect.[12] Rather, redshifting due to the expansion of space is known as cosmological redshift, which can be derived purely from the Robertson-Walker metric under the formalism of general relativity. Having said this, it also happens that there are detectable Doppler effects on cosmological scales, which, if incorrectly interpreted as cosmological in origin, lead to the observation of redshift-space distortions.[13]

Radar

 
U.S. Army soldier using a radar gun, an application of Doppler radar, to catch speeding violators.

The Doppler effect is used in some types of radar, to measure the velocity of detected objects. A radar beam is fired at a moving target — e.g. a motor car, as police use radar to detect speeding motorists — as it approaches or recedes from the radar source. Each successive radar wave has to travel farther to reach the car, before being reflected and re-detected near the source. As each wave has to move farther, the gap between each wave increases, increasing the wavelength. In some situations, the radar beam is fired at the moving car as it approaches, in which case each successive wave travels a lesser distance, decreasing the wavelength. In either situation, calculations from the Doppler effect accurately determine the car's velocity. Moreover, the proximity fuze, developed during World War II, relies upon Doppler radar to detonate explosives at the correct time, height, distance, etc.[citation needed]

Because the doppler shift affects the wave incident upon the target as well as the wave reflected back to the radar, the change in frequency observed by a radar due to a target moving at relative velocity   is twice that from the same target emitting a wave:[14]

 

Medical

 
Colour flow ultrasonography (Doppler) of a carotid artery – scanner and screen

An echocardiogram can, within certain limits, produce an accurate assessment of the direction of blood flow and the velocity of blood and cardiac tissue at any arbitrary point using the Doppler effect. One of the limitations is that the ultrasound beam should be as parallel to the blood flow as possible. Velocity measurements allow assessment of cardiac valve areas and function, abnormal communications between the left and right side of the heart, leaking of blood through the valves (valvular regurgitation), and calculation of the cardiac output. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound using gas-filled microbubble contrast media can be used to improve velocity or other flow-related medical measurements.[15][16]

Although "Doppler" has become synonymous with "velocity measurement" in medical imaging, in many cases it is not the frequency shift (Doppler shift) of the received signal that is measured, but the phase shift (when the received signal arrives).[p 4]

Velocity measurements of blood flow are also used in other fields of medical ultrasonography, such as obstetric ultrasonography and neurology. Velocity measurement of blood flow in arteries and veins based on Doppler effect is an effective tool for diagnosis of vascular problems like stenosis.[17]

Flow measurement

Instruments such as the laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV), and acoustic Doppler velocimeter (ADV) have been developed to measure velocities in a fluid flow. The LDV emits a light beam and the ADV emits an ultrasonic acoustic burst, and measure the Doppler shift in wavelengths of reflections from particles moving with the flow. The actual flow is computed as a function of the water velocity and phase. This technique allows non-intrusive flow measurements, at high precision and high frequency.

Velocity profile measurement

Developed originally for velocity measurements in medical applications (blood flow), Ultrasonic Doppler Velocimetry (UDV) can measure in real time complete velocity profile in almost any liquids containing particles in suspension such as dust, gas bubbles, emulsions. Flows can be pulsating, oscillating, laminar or turbulent, stationary or transient. This technique is fully non-invasive.

Satellites

 
Possible Doppler shifts in dependence of the elevation angle (LEO: orbit altitude   = 750 km). Fixed ground station.[18]
 
Geometry for Doppler effects. Variables:   is the velocity of the mobile station,   is the velocity of the satellite,   is the relative speed of the satellite,   is the elevation angle of the satellite and   is the driving direction with respect to the satellite.
 
Doppler effect on the mobile channel. Variables:   is the carrier frequency,   is the maximum Doppler shift due to the mobile station moving (see Doppler Spread) and   is the additional Doppler shift due to the satellite moving.

Satellite navigation

The Doppler shift can be exploited for satellite navigation such as in Transit and DORIS.

Satellite communication

Doppler also needs to be compensated in satellite communication. Fast moving satellites can have a Doppler shift of dozens of kilohertz relative to a ground station. The speed, thus magnitude of Doppler effect, changes due to earth curvature. Dynamic Doppler compensation, where the frequency of a signal is changed progressively during transmission, is used so the satellite receives a constant frequency signal.[19] After realizing that the Doppler shift had not been considered before launch of the Huygens probe of the 2005 Cassini–Huygens mission, the probe trajectory was altered to approach Titan in such a way that its transmissions traveled perpendicular to its direction of motion relative to Cassini, greatly reducing the Doppler shift.[20]

Doppler shift of the direct path can be estimated by the following formula:[21]

 
where   is the velocity of the mobile station,   is the wavelength of the carrier,   is the elevation angle of the satellite and   is the driving direction with respect to the satellite.

The additional Doppler shift due to the satellite moving can be described as:

 
where   is the relative speed of the satellite.

Audio

The Leslie speaker, most commonly associated with and predominantly used with the famous Hammond organ, takes advantage of the Doppler effect by using an electric motor to rotate an acoustic horn around a loudspeaker, sending its sound in a circle. This results at the listener's ear in rapidly fluctuating frequencies of a keyboard note.

Vibration measurement

A laser Doppler vibrometer (LDV) is a non-contact instrument for measuring vibration. The laser beam from the LDV is directed at the surface of interest, and the vibration amplitude and frequency are extracted from the Doppler shift of the laser beam frequency due to the motion of the surface.

Developmental biology

During the segmentation of vertebrate embryos, waves of gene expression sweep across the presomitic mesoderm, the tissue from which the precursors of the vertebrae (somites) are formed. A new somite is formed upon arrival of a wave at the anterior end of the presomitic mesoderm. In zebrafish, it has been shown that the shortening of the presomitic mesoderm during segmentation leads to a Doppler-like effect as the anterior end of the tissue moves into the waves. This effect contributes to the period of segmentation.[p 5]

Inverse Doppler effect

Since 1968 scientists such as Victor Veselago have speculated about the possibility of an inverse Doppler effect. The size of the Doppler shift depends on the refractive index of the medium a wave is traveling through. But some materials are capable of negative refraction, which should lead to a Doppler shift that works in a direction opposite that of a conventional Doppler shift.[22] The first experiment that detected this effect was conducted by Nigel Seddon and Trevor Bearpark in Bristol, United Kingdom in 2003.[p 6] Later, the inverse Doppler effect was observed in some inhomogeneous materials, and predicted inside a Vavilov–Cherenkov cone.[23]

See also

Primary sources

  1. ^ Buys Ballot (1845). "Akustische Versuche auf der Niederländischen Eisenbahn, nebst gelegentlichen Bemerkungen zur Theorie des Hrn. Prof. Doppler (in German)". Annalen der Physik und Chemie. 142 (11): 321–351. Bibcode:1845AnP...142..321B. doi:10.1002/andp.18451421102.
  2. ^ Fizeau: "Acoustique et optique". Lecture, Société Philomathique de Paris, 29 December 1848. According to Becker(pg. 109), this was never published, but recounted by M. Moigno(1850): "Répertoire d'optique moderne" (in French), vol 3. pp 1165–1203 and later in full by Fizeau, "Des effets du mouvement sur le ton des vibrations sonores et sur la longeur d'onde des rayons de lumière"; [Paris, 1870]. Annales de Chimie et de Physique, 19, 211–221.
  3. ^ Scott Russell, John (1848). "On certain effects produced on sound by the rapid motion of the observer". Report of the Eighteenth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. 18 (7): 37–38. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  4. ^ Petrescu, Florian Ion T (2015). "Improving Medical Imaging and Blood Flow Measurement by using a New Doppler Effect Relationship". American Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences. 8 (4): 582–588. doi:10.3844/ajeassp.2015.582.588 – via Proquest.
  5. ^ Soroldoni, D.; Jörg, D. J.; Morelli, L. G.; Richmond, D. L.; Schindelin, J.; Jülicher, F.; Oates, A. C. (2014). "A Doppler Effect in Embryonic Pattern Formation". Science. 345 (6193): 222–225. Bibcode:2014Sci...345..222S. doi:10.1126/science.1253089. PMC 7611034. PMID 25013078. S2CID 206556621.
  6. ^ Kozyrev, Alexander B.; van der Weide, Daniel W. (2005). "Explanation of the Inverse Doppler Effect Observed in Nonlinear Transmission Lines". Physical Review Letters. 94 (20): 203902. Bibcode:2005PhRvL..94t3902K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.94.203902. PMID 16090248.

References

  1. ^ United States. Navy Department (1969). Principles and Applications of Underwater Sound, Originally Issued as Summary Technical Report of Division 6, NDRC, Vol. 7, 1946, Reprinted...1968. p. 194. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  2. ^ Joseph, A. (2013). Measuring Ocean Currents: Tools, Technologies, and Data. Elsevier Science. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-12-391428-6. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
  3. ^ a b Giordano, Nicholas (2009). College Physics: Reasoning and Relationships. Cengage Learning. pp. 421–424. ISBN 978-0534424718.
  4. ^ a b Possel, Markus (2017). . Einstein Online, Vol. 5. Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics, Potsdam, Germany. Archived from the original on September 14, 2017. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  5. ^ Henderson, Tom (2017). "The Doppler Effect – Lesson 3, Waves". Physics tutorial. The Physics Classroom. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  6. ^ Alec Eden The search for Christian Doppler, Springer-Verlag, Wien 1992. Contains a facsimile edition with an English translation.
  7. ^ Becker (2011). Barbara J. Becker, Unravelling Starlight: William and Margaret Huggins and the Rise of the New Astronomy, illustrated Edition, Cambridge University Press, 2011; ISBN 110700229X, 9781107002296.
  8. ^ a b Rosen, Joe; Gothard, Lisa Quinn (2009). Encyclopedia of Physical Science. Infobase Publishing. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-8160-7011-4.
  9. ^ Strutt (Lord Rayleigh), John William (1896). MacMillan & Co (ed.). The Theory of Sound. Vol. 2 (2 ed.). Macmillan. p. 154.
  10. ^ Agarwal, Saurabh; Gaurav, Ashish Kumar; Nirala, Mehul Kumar; Sinha, Sayan (2018). "Potential and Sampling Based RRT Star for Real-Time Dynamic Motion Planning Accounting for Momentum in Cost Function". Neural Information Processing. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 11307. pp. 209–221. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-04239-4_19. ISBN 978-3-030-04238-7.
  11. ^ "Doppler Shift". astro.ucla.edu.
  12. ^ The distinction is made clear in Harrison, Edward Robert (2000). Cosmology: The Science of the Universe (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 306ff. ISBN 978-0-521-66148-5.
  13. ^ An excellent review of the topic in technical detail is given here: Percival, Will; Samushia, Lado; Ross, Ashley; Shapiro, Charles; Raccanelli, Alvise (2011). "Review article: Redshift-space distortions". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 369 (1957): 5058–67. Bibcode:2011RSPTA.369.5058P. doi:10.1098/rsta.2011.0370. PMID 22084293.
  14. ^ Wolff, Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Christian. "Radar Basics". radartutorial.eu. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  15. ^ Davies, MJ; Newton, JD (2 July 2017). "Non-invasive imaging in cardiology for the generalist". British Journal of Hospital Medicine. 78 (7): 392–398. doi:10.12968/hmed.2017.78.7.392. PMID 28692375.
  16. ^ Appis, AW; Tracy, MJ; Feinstein, SB (1 June 2015). "Update on the safety and efficacy of commercial ultrasound contrast agents in cardiac applications". Echo Research and Practice. 2 (2): R55–62. doi:10.1530/ERP-15-0018. PMC 4676450. PMID 26693339.
  17. ^ Evans, D. H.; McDicken, W. N. (2000). Doppler Ultrasound (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-97001-9.[page needed]
  18. ^ Otilia Popescuy, Jason S. Harrisz and Dimitrie C. Popescuz, Designing the Communica- tion Sub-System for Nanosatellite CubeSat Missions: Operational and Implementation Perspectives, 2016, IEEE
  19. ^ Qingchong, Liu (1999), "Doppler measurement and compensation in mobile satellite communications systems", Military Communications Conference Proceedings / MILCOM, 1: 316–320, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.674.3987, doi:10.1109/milcom.1999.822695, ISBN 978-0-7803-5538-5, S2CID 12586746
  20. ^ Oberg, James (October 4, 2004). "Titan Calling | How a Swedish engineer saved a once-in-a-lifetime mission to Saturn's mysterious moon". IEEE Spectrum. (offline as of 2006-10-14, see )
  21. ^ Arndt, D. (2015). On Channel Modelling for Land Mobile Satellite Reception (Doctoral dissertation).
  22. ^ "Doppler shift is seen in reverse". Physics World. 10 March 2011.
  23. ^ Shi, Xihang; Lin, Xiao; Kaminer, Ido; Gao, Fei; Yang, Zhaoju; Joannopoulos, John D.; Soljačić, Marin; Zhang, Baile (October 2018). "Superlight inverse Doppler effect". Nature Physics. 14 (10): 1001–1005. arXiv:1805.12427. Bibcode:2018arXiv180512427S. doi:10.1038/s41567-018-0209-6. ISSN 1745-2473. S2CID 125790662.

Further reading

  • Doppler, C. (1842). Über das farbige Licht der Doppelsterne und einiger anderer Gestirne des Himmels (About the coloured light of the binary stars and some other stars of the heavens). Publisher: Abhandlungen der Königl. Böhm. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften (V. Folge, Bd. 2, S. 465–482) [Proceedings of the Royal Bohemian Society of Sciences (Part V, Vol 2)]; Prague: 1842 (Reissued 1903). Some sources mention 1843 as year of publication because in that year the article was published in the Proceedings of the Bohemian Society of Sciences. Doppler himself referred to the publication as "Prag 1842 bei Borrosch und André", because in 1842 he had a preliminary edition printed that he distributed independently.
  • "Doppler and the Doppler effect", E. N. da C. Andrade, Endeavour Vol. XVIII No. 69, January 1959 (published by ICI London). Historical account of Doppler's original paper and subsequent developments.
  • David Nolte (2020). The fall and rise of the Doppler effect. Physics Today, v. 73, pgs. 31 - 35. DOI: 10.1063/PT.3.4429
  • Adrian, Eleni (24 June 1995). . NCSA. Archived from the original on 12 May 2009. Retrieved 2008-07-13.

External links

  •   Media related to Doppler effect at Wikimedia Commons
  • Doppler Effect, ScienceWorld

doppler, effect, doppler, redirects, here, other, uses, doppler, disambiguation, doppler, shift, simply, doppler, when, context, change, frequency, wave, relation, observer, moving, relative, wave, source, named, after, austrian, physicist, christian, doppler,. Doppler redirects here For other uses see Doppler disambiguation The Doppler effect or Doppler shift or simply Doppler when in context 1 2 is the change in frequency of a wave in relation to an observer who is moving relative to the wave source 3 It is named after the Austrian physicist Christian Doppler who described the phenomenon in 1842 Change of wavelength caused by motion of the source An animation illustrating how the Doppler effect causes a car engine or siren to sound higher in pitch when it is approaching than when it is receding The red circles represent sound waves Passing car horn source source A common example of Doppler shift is the change of pitch heard when a vehicle sounding a horn approaches and recedes from an observer Compared to the emitted frequency the received frequency is higher during the approach identical at the instant of passing by and lower during the recession 4 The reason for the Doppler effect is that when the source of the waves is moving towards the observer each successive wave crest is emitted from a position closer to the observer than the crest of the previous wave 4 5 Therefore each wave takes slightly less time to reach the observer than the previous wave Hence the time between the arrivals of successive wave crests at the observer is reduced causing an increase in the frequency While they are traveling the distance between successive wave fronts is reduced so the waves bunch together Conversely if the source of waves is moving away from the observer each wave is emitted from a position farther from the observer than the previous wave so the arrival time between successive waves is increased reducing the frequency The distance between successive wave fronts is then increased so the waves spread out For waves that propagate in a medium such as sound waves the velocity of the observer and of the source are relative to the medium in which the waves are transmitted 3 The total Doppler effect may therefore result from motion of the source motion of the observer or motion of the medium Each of these effects is analyzed separately For waves which do not require a medium such as electromagnetic waves or gravitational waves only the relative difference in velocity between the observer and the source needs to be considered When this relative velocity is not negligible compared to the speed of light a more complicated relativistic Doppler effect arises Contents 1 History 2 General 3 Consequences 4 Applications 4 1 Acoustic Doppler current profiler 4 2 Robotics 4 3 Sirens 4 4 Astronomy 4 5 Radar 4 6 Medical 4 7 Flow measurement 4 8 Velocity profile measurement 4 9 Satellites 4 9 1 Satellite navigation 4 9 2 Satellite communication 4 10 Audio 4 11 Vibration measurement 4 12 Developmental biology 5 Inverse Doppler effect 6 See also 7 Primary sources 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit Experiment by Buys Ballot 1845 depicted on a wall in Utrecht 2019 Doppler first proposed this effect in 1842 in his treatise Uber das farbige Licht der Doppelsterne und einiger anderer Gestirne des Himmels On the coloured light of the binary stars and some other stars of the heavens 6 The hypothesis was tested for sound waves by Buys Ballot in 1845 p 1 He confirmed that the sound s pitch was higher than the emitted frequency when the sound source approached him and lower than the emitted frequency when the sound source receded from him Hippolyte Fizeau discovered independently the same phenomenon on electromagnetic waves in 1848 in France the effect is sometimes called effet Doppler Fizeau but that name was not adopted by the rest of the world as Fizeau s discovery was six years after Doppler s proposal p 2 7 In Britain John Scott Russell made an experimental study of the Doppler effect 1848 p 3 General EditIn classical physics where the speeds of source and the receiver relative to the medium are lower than the velocity of waves in the medium the relationship between observed frequency f displaystyle f and emitted frequency f 0 displaystyle f text 0 is given by 8 f c v r c v s f 0 displaystyle f left frac c pm v text r c pm v text s right f 0 where c displaystyle c is the propagation speed of waves in the medium v r displaystyle v text r is the speed of the receiver relative to the medium added to c displaystyle c if the receiver is moving towards the source subtracted if the receiver is moving away from the source v s displaystyle v text s is the speed of the source relative to the medium added to c displaystyle c if the source is moving away from the receiver subtracted if the source is moving towards the receiver Note this relationship predicts that the frequency will decrease if either source or receiver is moving away from the other Equivalently under the assumption that the source is either directly approaching or receding from the observer f v w r f 0 v w s 1 l displaystyle frac f v wr frac f 0 v ws frac 1 lambda where v w r displaystyle v wr is the wave s velocity relative to the receiver v w s displaystyle v ws is the wave s velocity relative to the source l displaystyle lambda is the wavelength If the source approaches the observer at an angle but still with a constant velocity the observed frequency that is first heard is higher than the object s emitted frequency Thereafter there is a monotonic decrease in the observed frequency as it gets closer to the observer through equality when it is coming from a direction perpendicular to the relative motion and was emitted at the point of closest approach but when the wave is received the source and observer will no longer be at their closest and a continued monotonic decrease as it recedes from the observer When the observer is very close to the path of the object the transition from high to low frequency is very abrupt When the observer is far from the path of the object the transition from high to low frequency is gradual If the speeds v s displaystyle v text s and v r displaystyle v text r are small compared to the speed of the wave the relationship between observed frequency f displaystyle f and emitted frequency f 0 displaystyle f text 0 is approximately 8 Observed frequency Change in frequencyf 1 D v c f 0 displaystyle f left 1 frac Delta v c right f 0 D f D v c f 0 displaystyle Delta f frac Delta v c f 0 where D f f f 0 displaystyle Delta f f f 0 D v v r v s displaystyle Delta v v text r v text s is the opposite of the velocity of the receiver relative to the source it is positive when the source and the receiver are moving towards each other Proof Given f c v r c v s f 0 displaystyle f left frac c v text r c v text s right f 0 we divide for c displaystyle c f 1 v r c 1 v s c f 0 1 v r c 1 1 v s c f 0 displaystyle f left frac 1 frac v text r c 1 frac v text s c right f 0 left 1 frac v text r c right left frac 1 1 frac v text s c right f 0 Since v s c 1 displaystyle frac v text s c ll 1 we can substitute the geometric expansion 1 1 v s c 1 v s c displaystyle frac 1 1 frac v text s c approx 1 frac v text s c Stationary sound source produces sound waves at a constant frequency f and the wave fronts propagate symmetrically away from the source at a constant speed c The distance between wave fronts is the wavelength All observers will hear the same frequency which will be equal to the actual frequency of the source where f f0 The same sound source is radiating sound waves at a constant frequency in the same medium However now the sound source is moving with a speed ys 0 7 c Since the source is moving the centre of each new wavefront is now slightly displaced to the right As a result the wave fronts begin to bunch up on the right side in front of and spread further apart on the left side behind of the source An observer in front of the source will hear a higher frequency f c 0 c 0 7c f0 3 33 f0 and an observer behind the source will hear a lower frequency f c 0 c 0 7c f0 0 59 f0 Now the source is moving at the speed of sound in the medium ys c The wave fronts in front of the source are now all bunched up at the same point As a result an observer in front of the source will detect nothing until the source arrives and an observer behind the source will hear a lower frequency f c 0 c c f0 0 5 f0 The sound source has now surpassed the speed of sound in the medium and is traveling at 1 4 c Since the source is moving faster than the sound waves it creates it actually leads the advancing wavefront The sound source will pass by a stationary observer before the observer hears the sound As a result an observer in front of the source will detect nothing and an observer behind the source will hear a lower frequency f c 0 c 1 4c f0 0 42 f0 Consequences EditWith an observer stationary relative to the medium if a moving source is emitting waves with an actual frequency f 0 displaystyle f 0 in this case the wavelength is changed the transmission velocity of the wave keeps constant note that the transmission velocity of the wave does not depend on the velocity of the source then the observer detects waves with a frequency f displaystyle f given byf c c v s f 0 displaystyle f left frac c c pm v text s right f 0 A similar analysis for a moving observer and a stationary source in this case the wavelength keeps constant but due to the motion the rate at which the observer receives waves and hence the transmission velocity of the wave with respect to the observer is changed yields the observed frequency f c v r c f 0 displaystyle f left frac c pm v text r c right f 0 Assuming a stationary observer and a source moving at the speed of sound the Doppler equation predicts a perceived momentary infinite frequency by an observer in front of a source that is traveling at the speed of sound All the peaks are at the same place so the wavelength is zero and the frequency is infinite This overlay of all the waves produces a shock wave which for sound waves is known as a sonic boom When the source moves faster than the wave speed the source outruns the wave The equation gives negative frequency values which have no physical sense in this context no sound at all will be heard by the observer until the source passes past them Lord Rayleigh predicted the following effect in his classic book on sound if the observer were moving from the stationary source at twice the speed of sound a musical piece previously emitted by that source would be heard in correct tempo and pitch but as if played backwards 9 Applications EditAcoustic Doppler current profiler Edit An acoustic Doppler current profiler ADCP is a hydroacoustic current meter similar to a sonar used to measure water current velocities over a depth range using the Doppler effect of sound waves scattered back from particles within the water column The term ADCP is a generic term for all acoustic current profilers although the abbreviation originates from an instrument series introduced by RD Instruments in the 1980s The working frequencies range of ADCPs range from 38 kHz to several Megahertz The device used in the air for wind speed profiling using sound is known as SODAR and works with the same underlying principles Robotics Edit Dynamic real time path planning in robotics to aid the movement of robots in a sophisticated environment with moving obstacles often take help of Doppler effect 10 Such applications are specially used for competitive robotics where the environment is constantly changing such as robosoccer Sirens Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Sirens on passing emergency vehicles A siren on a passing emergency vehicle will start out higher than its stationary pitch slide down as it passes and continue lower than its stationary pitch as it recedes from the observer Astronomer John Dobson explained the effect thus The reason the siren slides is because it doesn t hit you In other words if the siren approached the observer directly the pitch would remain constant at a higher than stationary pitch until the vehicle hit him and then immediately jump to a new lower pitch Because the vehicle passes by the observer the radial velocity does not remain constant but instead varies as a function of the angle between his line of sight and the siren s velocity v radial v s cos 8 displaystyle v text radial v text s cos theta where 8 displaystyle theta is the angle between the object s forward velocity and the line of sight from the object to the observer Astronomy Edit Main article Relativistic Doppler effect Redshift of spectral lines in the optical spectrum of a supercluster of distant galaxies right as compared to that of the Sun left The Doppler effect for electromagnetic waves such as light is of widespread use in astronomy to measure the speed at which stars and galaxies are approaching or receding from us resulting in so called blueshift or redshift respectively This may be used to detect if an apparently single star is in reality a close binary to measure the rotational speed of stars and galaxies or to detect exoplanets This effect typically happens on a very small scale there would not be a noticeable difference in visible light to the unaided eye 11 The use of the Doppler effect in astronomy depends on knowledge of precise frequencies of discrete lines in the spectra of stars Among the nearby stars the largest radial velocities with respect to the Sun are 308 km s BD 15 4041 also known as LHS 52 81 7 light years away and 260 km s Woolley 9722 also known as Wolf 1106 and LHS 64 78 2 light years away Positive radial velocity means the star is receding from the Sun negative that it is approaching Redshift is also used to measure the expansion of space but this is not truly a Doppler effect 12 Rather redshifting due to the expansion of space is known as cosmological redshift which can be derived purely from the Robertson Walker metric under the formalism of general relativity Having said this it also happens that there are detectable Doppler effects on cosmological scales which if incorrectly interpreted as cosmological in origin lead to the observation of redshift space distortions 13 Radar Edit Main article Doppler radar U S Army soldier using a radar gun an application of Doppler radar to catch speeding violators The Doppler effect is used in some types of radar to measure the velocity of detected objects A radar beam is fired at a moving target e g a motor car as police use radar to detect speeding motorists as it approaches or recedes from the radar source Each successive radar wave has to travel farther to reach the car before being reflected and re detected near the source As each wave has to move farther the gap between each wave increases increasing the wavelength In some situations the radar beam is fired at the moving car as it approaches in which case each successive wave travels a lesser distance decreasing the wavelength In either situation calculations from the Doppler effect accurately determine the car s velocity Moreover the proximity fuze developed during World War II relies upon Doppler radar to detonate explosives at the correct time height distance etc citation needed Because the doppler shift affects the wave incident upon the target as well as the wave reflected back to the radar the change in frequency observed by a radar due to a target moving at relative velocity D v displaystyle Delta v is twice that from the same target emitting a wave 14 D f 2 D v c f 0 displaystyle Delta f frac 2 Delta v c f 0 Medical Edit Main article Doppler ultrasonography Colour flow ultrasonography Doppler of a carotid artery scanner and screen An echocardiogram can within certain limits produce an accurate assessment of the direction of blood flow and the velocity of blood and cardiac tissue at any arbitrary point using the Doppler effect One of the limitations is that the ultrasound beam should be as parallel to the blood flow as possible Velocity measurements allow assessment of cardiac valve areas and function abnormal communications between the left and right side of the heart leaking of blood through the valves valvular regurgitation and calculation of the cardiac output Contrast enhanced ultrasound using gas filled microbubble contrast media can be used to improve velocity or other flow related medical measurements 15 16 Although Doppler has become synonymous with velocity measurement in medical imaging in many cases it is not the frequency shift Doppler shift of the received signal that is measured but the phase shift when the received signal arrives p 4 Velocity measurements of blood flow are also used in other fields of medical ultrasonography such as obstetric ultrasonography and neurology Velocity measurement of blood flow in arteries and veins based on Doppler effect is an effective tool for diagnosis of vascular problems like stenosis 17 Flow measurement Edit Instruments such as the laser Doppler velocimeter LDV and acoustic Doppler velocimeter ADV have been developed to measure velocities in a fluid flow The LDV emits a light beam and the ADV emits an ultrasonic acoustic burst and measure the Doppler shift in wavelengths of reflections from particles moving with the flow The actual flow is computed as a function of the water velocity and phase This technique allows non intrusive flow measurements at high precision and high frequency Velocity profile measurement Edit Developed originally for velocity measurements in medical applications blood flow Ultrasonic Doppler Velocimetry UDV can measure in real time complete velocity profile in almost any liquids containing particles in suspension such as dust gas bubbles emulsions Flows can be pulsating oscillating laminar or turbulent stationary or transient This technique is fully non invasive Satellites Edit Possible Doppler shifts in dependence of the elevation angle LEO orbit altitude h displaystyle h 750 km Fixed ground station 18 Geometry for Doppler effects Variables v mob displaystyle v text mob is the velocity of the mobile station v Sat displaystyle v text Sat is the velocity of the satellite v rel sat displaystyle v text rel sat is the relative speed of the satellite ϕ displaystyle phi is the elevation angle of the satellite and 8 displaystyle theta is the driving direction with respect to the satellite Doppler effect on the mobile channel Variables f c c l c displaystyle f c frac c lambda rm c is the carrier frequency f D m a x v m o b l c displaystyle f rm D max frac v rm mob lambda rm c is the maximum Doppler shift due to the mobile station moving see Doppler Spread and f D S a t displaystyle f rm D Sat is the additional Doppler shift due to the satellite moving Satellite navigation Edit Main article Satellite navigation The Doppler shift can be exploited for satellite navigation such as in Transit and DORIS Satellite communication Edit Main article Satellite communication Doppler also needs to be compensated in satellite communication Fast moving satellites can have a Doppler shift of dozens of kilohertz relative to a ground station The speed thus magnitude of Doppler effect changes due to earth curvature Dynamic Doppler compensation where the frequency of a signal is changed progressively during transmission is used so the satellite receives a constant frequency signal 19 After realizing that the Doppler shift had not been considered before launch of the Huygens probe of the 2005 Cassini Huygens mission the probe trajectory was altered to approach Titan in such a way that its transmissions traveled perpendicular to its direction of motion relative to Cassini greatly reducing the Doppler shift 20 Doppler shift of the direct path can be estimated by the following formula 21 f D d i r v m o b l c cos ϕ cos 8 displaystyle f rm D dir frac v rm mob lambda rm c cos phi cos theta where v mob displaystyle v text mob is the velocity of the mobile station l c displaystyle lambda rm c is the wavelength of the carrier ϕ displaystyle phi is the elevation angle of the satellite and 8 displaystyle theta is the driving direction with respect to the satellite The additional Doppler shift due to the satellite moving can be described as f D s a t v r e l s a t l c displaystyle f rm D sat frac v rm rel sat lambda rm c where v r e l s a t displaystyle v rm rel sat is the relative speed of the satellite Audio Edit The Leslie speaker most commonly associated with and predominantly used with the famous Hammond organ takes advantage of the Doppler effect by using an electric motor to rotate an acoustic horn around a loudspeaker sending its sound in a circle This results at the listener s ear in rapidly fluctuating frequencies of a keyboard note Vibration measurement Edit A laser Doppler vibrometer LDV is a non contact instrument for measuring vibration The laser beam from the LDV is directed at the surface of interest and the vibration amplitude and frequency are extracted from the Doppler shift of the laser beam frequency due to the motion of the surface Developmental biology Edit During the segmentation of vertebrate embryos waves of gene expression sweep across the presomitic mesoderm the tissue from which the precursors of the vertebrae somites are formed A new somite is formed upon arrival of a wave at the anterior end of the presomitic mesoderm In zebrafish it has been shown that the shortening of the presomitic mesoderm during segmentation leads to a Doppler like effect as the anterior end of the tissue moves into the waves This effect contributes to the period of segmentation p 5 Inverse Doppler effect EditSince 1968 scientists such as Victor Veselago have speculated about the possibility of an inverse Doppler effect The size of the Doppler shift depends on the refractive index of the medium a wave is traveling through But some materials are capable of negative refraction which should lead to a Doppler shift that works in a direction opposite that of a conventional Doppler shift 22 The first experiment that detected this effect was conducted by Nigel Seddon and Trevor Bearpark in Bristol United Kingdom in 2003 p 6 Later the inverse Doppler effect was observed in some inhomogeneous materials and predicted inside a Vavilov Cherenkov cone 23 See also EditBistatic Doppler shift Differential Doppler effect Doppler cooling Dopplergraph Fading Fizeau experiment Photoacoustic Doppler effect Range rate Rayleigh fading Redshift Laser Doppler imaging Relativistic Doppler effectPrimary sources Edit Buys Ballot 1845 Akustische Versuche auf der Niederlandischen Eisenbahn nebst gelegentlichen Bemerkungen zur Theorie des Hrn Prof Doppler in German Annalen der Physik und Chemie 142 11 321 351 Bibcode 1845AnP 142 321B doi 10 1002 andp 18451421102 Fizeau Acoustique et optique Lecture Societe Philomathique de Paris 29 December 1848 According to Becker pg 109 this was never published but recounted by M Moigno 1850 Repertoire d optique moderne in French vol 3 pp 1165 1203 and later in full by Fizeau Des effets du mouvement sur le ton des vibrations sonores et sur la longeur d onde des rayons de lumiere Paris 1870 Annales de Chimie et de Physique 19 211 221 Scott Russell John 1848 On certain effects produced on sound by the rapid motion of the observer Report of the Eighteenth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 18 7 37 38 Retrieved 2008 07 08 Petrescu Florian Ion T 2015 Improving Medical Imaging and Blood Flow Measurement by using a New Doppler Effect Relationship American Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences 8 4 582 588 doi 10 3844 ajeassp 2015 582 588 via Proquest Soroldoni D Jorg D J Morelli L G Richmond D L Schindelin J Julicher F Oates A C 2014 A Doppler Effect in Embryonic Pattern Formation Science 345 6193 222 225 Bibcode 2014Sci 345 222S doi 10 1126 science 1253089 PMC 7611034 PMID 25013078 S2CID 206556621 Kozyrev Alexander B van der Weide Daniel W 2005 Explanation of the Inverse Doppler Effect Observed in Nonlinear Transmission Lines Physical Review Letters 94 20 203902 Bibcode 2005PhRvL 94t3902K doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 94 203902 PMID 16090248 References Edit United States Navy Department 1969 Principles and Applications of Underwater Sound Originally Issued as Summary Technical Report of Division 6 NDRC Vol 7 1946 Reprinted 1968 p 194 Retrieved 2021 03 29 Joseph A 2013 Measuring Ocean Currents Tools Technologies and Data Elsevier Science p 164 ISBN 978 0 12 391428 6 Retrieved 2021 03 30 a b Giordano Nicholas 2009 College Physics Reasoning and Relationships Cengage Learning pp 421 424 ISBN 978 0534424718 a b Possel Markus 2017 Waves motion and frequency the Doppler effect Einstein Online Vol 5 Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Potsdam Germany Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved September 4 2017 Henderson Tom 2017 The Doppler Effect Lesson 3 Waves Physics tutorial The Physics Classroom Retrieved September 4 2017 Alec Eden The search for Christian Doppler Springer Verlag Wien 1992 Contains a facsimile edition with an English translation Becker 2011 Barbara J Becker Unravelling Starlight William and Margaret Huggins and the Rise of the New Astronomy illustrated Edition Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 110700229X 9781107002296 a b Rosen Joe Gothard Lisa Quinn 2009 Encyclopedia of Physical Science Infobase Publishing p 155 ISBN 978 0 8160 7011 4 Strutt Lord Rayleigh John William 1896 MacMillan amp Co ed The Theory of Sound Vol 2 2 ed Macmillan p 154 Agarwal Saurabh Gaurav Ashish Kumar Nirala Mehul Kumar Sinha Sayan 2018 Potential and Sampling Based RRT Star for Real Time Dynamic Motion Planning Accounting for Momentum in Cost Function Neural Information Processing Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 11307 pp 209 221 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 04239 4 19 ISBN 978 3 030 04238 7 Doppler Shift astro ucla edu The distinction is made clear in Harrison Edward Robert 2000 Cosmology The Science of the Universe 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 306ff ISBN 978 0 521 66148 5 An excellent review of the topic in technical detail is given here Percival Will Samushia Lado Ross Ashley Shapiro Charles Raccanelli Alvise 2011 Review article Redshift space distortions Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 369 1957 5058 67 Bibcode 2011RSPTA 369 5058P doi 10 1098 rsta 2011 0370 PMID 22084293 Wolff Dipl Ing FH Christian Radar Basics radartutorial eu Retrieved 14 April 2018 Davies MJ Newton JD 2 July 2017 Non invasive imaging in cardiology for the generalist British Journal of Hospital Medicine 78 7 392 398 doi 10 12968 hmed 2017 78 7 392 PMID 28692375 Appis AW Tracy MJ Feinstein SB 1 June 2015 Update on the safety and efficacy of commercial ultrasound contrast agents in cardiac applications Echo Research and Practice 2 2 R55 62 doi 10 1530 ERP 15 0018 PMC 4676450 PMID 26693339 Evans D H McDicken W N 2000 Doppler Ultrasound 2nd ed New York John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 471 97001 9 page needed Otilia Popescuy Jason S Harrisz and Dimitrie C Popescuz Designing the Communica tion Sub System for Nanosatellite CubeSat Missions Operational and Implementation Perspectives 2016 IEEE Qingchong Liu 1999 Doppler measurement and compensation in mobile satellite communications systems Military Communications Conference Proceedings MILCOM 1 316 320 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 674 3987 doi 10 1109 milcom 1999 822695 ISBN 978 0 7803 5538 5 S2CID 12586746 Oberg James October 4 2004 Titan Calling How a Swedish engineer saved a once in a lifetime mission to Saturn s mysterious moon IEEE Spectrum offline as of 2006 10 14 see Internet Archive version Arndt D 2015 On Channel Modelling for Land Mobile Satellite Reception Doctoral dissertation Doppler shift is seen in reverse Physics World 10 March 2011 Shi Xihang Lin Xiao Kaminer Ido Gao Fei Yang Zhaoju Joannopoulos John D Soljacic Marin Zhang Baile October 2018 Superlight inverse Doppler effect Nature Physics 14 10 1001 1005 arXiv 1805 12427 Bibcode 2018arXiv180512427S doi 10 1038 s41567 018 0209 6 ISSN 1745 2473 S2CID 125790662 Further reading EditDoppler C 1842 Uber das farbige Licht der Doppelsterne und einiger anderer Gestirne des Himmels About the coloured light of the binary stars and some other stars of the heavens Publisher Abhandlungen der Konigl Bohm Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften V Folge Bd 2 S 465 482 Proceedings of the Royal Bohemian Society of Sciences Part V Vol 2 Prague 1842 Reissued 1903 Some sources mention 1843 as year of publication because in that year the article was published in the Proceedings of the Bohemian Society of Sciences Doppler himself referred to the publication as Prag 1842 bei Borrosch und Andre because in 1842 he had a preliminary edition printed that he distributed independently Doppler and the Doppler effect E N da C Andrade Endeavour Vol XVIII No 69 January 1959 published by ICI London Historical account of Doppler s original paper and subsequent developments David Nolte 2020 The fall and rise of the Doppler effect Physics Today v 73 pgs 31 35 DOI 10 1063 PT 3 4429 Adrian Eleni 24 June 1995 Doppler Effect NCSA Archived from the original on 12 May 2009 Retrieved 2008 07 13 External links Edit Media related to Doppler effect at Wikimedia Commons Doppler Effect ScienceWorldPortals Astronomy Stars Mathematics Medicine Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doppler effect amp oldid 1123281697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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