A stretched wire of 80cm vibrates with fundamental frequency of 256Hz.If length of wire is reduced to 15cm, the fundamental frequency now will be?

freq= k/length

freq*length=k
256*80cm=f*15dm
f=256*80/15 hz

To find the new fundamental frequency of the stretched wire when its length is reduced to 15 cm, we can use the formula:

f = v / λ

Where:
f is the frequency,
v is the velocity of the wave, and
λ (lambda) is the wavelength of the wave.

We know that the length of the stretched wire is related to the wavelength of the wave by the equation:

λ = 2L

Where L is the length of the wire.

Given:
The initial length of the wire is 80 cm, which means L = 80 cm = 0.8 m.
The initial fundamental frequency is 256 Hz.
The new length of the wire is 15 cm, which means L' = 15 cm = 0.15 m.

To find the new fundamental frequency, we need to calculate the new wavelength first:

λ' = 2L' = 2 * 0.15 = 0.3 m

Now, we can calculate the new frequency using the formula:

f' = v / λ'

Since the velocity of the wave remains constant, we can assume it remains the same as in the initial condition.

Therefore, the new fundamental frequency, f', can be calculated as:

f' = (v / λ) * λ' = (256 Hz) * (0.3 m / 0.8 m) = 96 Hz

So, when the length of the wire is reduced to 15 cm, the new fundamental frequency will be 96 Hz.