The wave speed on a string is 148.9 m/s when the tension is 73.4 N. What tension will give a speed 184.9 m/s?

Wave speed is proportional to the square root of tension. You want to increase the wave speed by a factor

184.9/148.9 = 1.242
Tension must increase by the square of that factor.

To calculate the tension required to produce a wave speed of 184.9 m/s, we can use the formula for wave speed on a string:

Wave speed = √(tension / linear density)

Given that the wave speed is 148.9 m/s and the tension is 73.4 N, we can rearrange the formula to solve for the linear density:

148.9 m/s = √(73.4 N / linear density)

Squaring both sides of the equation gives:

(148.9 m/s)^2 = 73.4 N / linear density

Now, let's rearrange the equation to solve for the linear density:

linear density = 73.4 N / (148.9 m/s)^2

linear density ≈ 0.333 kg/m

Now, we can use the same formula to calculate the tension required to achieve a wave speed of 184.9 m/s:

184.9 m/s = √(tension / 0.333 kg/m)

Squaring both sides of the equation gives:

(184.9 m/s)^2 = tension / 0.333 kg/m

Now, let's rearrange the equation to solve for tension:

tension = (184.9 m/s)^2 * 0.333 kg/m

tension ≈ 10,334.71 N

Therefore, the tension required to achieve a wave speed of 184.9 m/s is approximately 10,334.71 N.