21 May 2026

Measuring Resistance Against Length: Why a Better Ruler End Makes a Better Physics Experiment

 


Measuring Resistance Against Length: Why a Better Ruler End Makes a Better Physics Experiment

The GCSE Physics Practical That Looks Simple — Until You Actually Try It

One of the standard GCSE Physics required practicals in the AQA syllabus is the investigation into how the resistance of a wire changes with its length.

On paper, it looks beautifully straightforward:

Take a length of resistance wire.
Connect it into a circuit.
Measure the potential difference and current.
Calculate resistance using:

R=VI​

Then change the length of the wire and repeat.

The expected result is also wonderfully satisfying: as the length of the wire increases, the resistance increases. In fact, for a uniform wire at constant temperature, resistance should be directly proportional to length.

So far, so good.

But like many school physics experiments, the real learning begins when students discover that the practical is not quite as neat as the textbook diagram suggests.


The Standard School Method

In many schools, this experiment is carried out using:

  • a metre ruler
  • a length of resistance wire
  • crocodile clips
  • a power supply or cell
  • an ammeter
  • a voltmeter
  • connecting leads

The wire is usually stretched along the metre ruler and fixed in place at each end. One crocodile clip remains at the start of the wire, and another crocodile clip is moved along the wire to select different lengths.

Students might test lengths such as:

  • 10 cm
  • 20 cm
  • 30 cm
  • 40 cm
  • 50 cm
  • 60 cm
  • 70 cm
  • 80 cm
  • 90 cm
  • 100 cm

For each length they measure the current and potential difference, calculate the resistance, repeat results, and then plot a graph of resistance against length.

This is a good experiment because it links practical work directly to theory. It also gives students a chance to practise graph work, repeat readings, control variables and discuss sources of uncertainty.

But there is a problem.


The Problem With Crocodile Clips

Crocodile clips are useful. They are cheap, common, robust and easy for students to use.

They are not, however, very precise measuring instruments.

When a crocodile clip is used to make contact with the wire, several small errors can appear:

  1. The contact point is not sharply defined
    A crocodile clip touches the wire over a small area, not at a single point.
  2. The wire may not start exactly at 0 cm
    If the wire is tied, taped or clipped to the ruler, the electrical length may not match the ruler reading.
  3. The wire can move
    As students move clips around, the wire may slip or bend slightly.
  4. The clip can damage or kink the wire
    This changes the quality of contact and can affect results.
  5. Students often measure from the wrong place
    They may read from the edge of the clip, the middle of the clip, or wherever seems most convenient at the time.

A few millimetres may not sound like much, but in a GCSE practical it matters. If the first point is supposed to be 10 cm and the actual electrical length is 11 cm, that is already a 10% error.

That is before we even consider heating of the wire, parallax errors, loose connections, fluctuating current or poor graph scales.


Why Accuracy Matters

It is tempting to say, “Well, the experiment still works.”

And it does.

Students will usually still find that a longer wire has a larger resistance. The graph will usually show a clear positive correlation. The teacher can still explain the relationship.

But practical science is not just about getting the “right sort of answer”.

It is about learning how scientists improve measurements.

A key part of GCSE Physics is understanding that experiments should be:

  • repeatable
  • reproducible
  • accurate
  • carefully controlled
  • honestly evaluated

If the equipment introduces avoidable uncertainty, then students should be encouraged to think about how the apparatus could be improved.

That is where this small piece of design work comes in.


Designing a Better End for the Ruler

To improve the experiment, we designed a simple end piece for the ruler.

The idea is straightforward: the resistance wire is wound around a peg at the end of the ruler so that the electrical starting point of the wire is fixed exactly at the 0 cm mark.

This means the length being measured is much more clearly defined.

Instead of saying, “The wire starts somewhere near the end of the ruler,” we can now say:

The wire starts at zero. The length measured on the ruler is the actual length used in the circuit.

That may sound like a small improvement, but in practical physics small improvements are often exactly what matter.


From Crocodile Clip to Jockey

The next improvement is to use a proper contact point, often called a jockey, rather than relying on a crocodile clip as the moving contact.

A jockey allows the student to touch the wire at a specific point on the scale. It gives a much clearer position than a crocodile clip wrapped around the wire.

This helps students understand that the length of wire in the circuit is not just a rough guess. It is a measured variable.

That is the point of the experiment.

We are not just waving a clip somewhere along a wire and hoping for the best. We are deliberately changing one variable — the length — and measuring its effect on resistance.


The Physics Behind the Experiment

The resistance of a wire depends on several factors:

R=ρLAR = \frac{\rho L}{A}

Where:

  • RR is resistance
  • ρ\rho is resistivity of the material
  • LL is length of the wire
  • AA is cross-sectional area

For GCSE students, the most important part is this:

RLR \propto L

provided the material and thickness of the wire stay the same, and the temperature does not change significantly.

A longer wire has more resistance because the electrons have to travel through more material. There are more collisions with the metal ions in the wire, so it is harder for charge to flow.

A useful analogy is to imagine walking through a crowded corridor.

A short crowded corridor is annoying.
A long crowded corridor is worse.

The longer the route, the more collisions and delays you experience.


A Practical Example for Students

Suppose a student records these results:

Length of wire / cmPotential difference / VCurrent / AResistance / Ω
200.400.800.50
400.800.801.00
601.200.801.50
801.600.802.00
1002.000.802.50

The resistance increases as the length increases. If we double the length from 20 cm to 40 cm, the resistance doubles from 0.50 Ω to 1.00 Ω.

This is the clean result we want students to see.

But real results are rarely this perfect.

A student might instead get:

Length of wire / cmResistance / Ω
200.54
400.96
601.49
802.08
1002.45

This is still a good result. It shows the same general trend. The points would still be close to a straight line.

The important question becomes:

Why are the points not perfectly on the line?

That is where students begin to think like physicists.


Sources of Error Students Should Discuss

This experiment is excellent for teaching evaluation. Students can discuss:

1. Uncertainty in length

If the contact point is not clear, the length may be slightly wrong. This is why a proper ruler end and jockey can improve the method.

2. Heating of the wire

As current flows, the wire warms up. Higher temperature increases resistance in a metal wire. This can be reduced by switching off the circuit between readings or using a lower current.

3. Poor electrical contacts

Loose crocodile clips or oxidised wire can add extra resistance. This can make results less reliable.

4. Reading uncertainty

Voltmeters and ammeters have limited precision. Students must read them carefully, especially if using analogue meters.

5. Parallax error

When reading the metre ruler, the student’s eye should be directly above the scale.

6. Wire thickness and material

The same wire should be used throughout. Changing wire thickness or material would change resistance for a different reason.


Repeatability and Reproducibility

This is one of the most useful teaching points in the whole experiment.

A result is repeatable if the same student, using the same method and equipment, gets similar results when they repeat the experiment.

A result is reproducible if someone else, using the same method, can obtain similar results.

That is why apparatus design matters.

If the start point of the wire is vague, and the moving contact is vague, then another student may not be measuring exactly the same thing. The experiment becomes less reproducible.

By fixing the wire so that it begins exactly at zero, we remove one source of uncertainty.

That is good science.


What This Teaches Beyond the Syllabus

This small improvement to the apparatus teaches students something very important:

Science is not just about following instructions. It is about improving the method.

At GCSE, students often think practical work is simply a recipe:

  1. Set up the apparatus.
  2. Take readings.
  3. Draw a graph.
  4. Write “human error” in the evaluation.

But good practical science is much better than that.

Students should be asking:

  • What exactly am I measuring?
  • Is the measurement reliable?
  • Where could uncertainty enter the experiment?
  • How could I improve the apparatus?
  • Would another student get the same result?
  • Does my graph support the theory?

That is the difference between doing an experiment and understanding an experiment.


A Personal Reflection From the Lab

This is one of the reasons I enjoy designing and adapting practical equipment.

Many commercial school experiments work, but they are not always designed for the way students actually use them. A teacher may understand where the measurement should begin, but a GCSE student under exam conditions may not.

If the apparatus can make the correct method clearer, then the student has a better chance of understanding the physics.

The little ruler end in the photograph is not a glamorous piece of equipment. It is not expensive. It does not need a computer, a sensor or a complicated interface.

But it solves a real practical problem.

It makes the start of the wire definite.

And in a measurement experiment, definite is good.


How Students Can Improve Their Method

A strong GCSE answer might suggest improvements such as:

  • use a jockey instead of a crocodile clip for the moving contact
  • make sure the wire starts exactly at 0 cm
  • keep the wire straight and taut
  • switch off the circuit between readings to reduce heating
  • take repeat readings and calculate a mean
  • use a low current to reduce temperature changes
  • check all connections are secure
  • plot a graph of resistance against length
  • draw a line of best fit
  • identify anomalous results
  • calculate resistance using R=V/I

These are not just “extra details”. They are the difference between a basic practical and a high-quality investigation.


What the Graph Should Show

The graph of resistance against length should be a straight line through, or close to, the origin.

This means:

  • when length increases, resistance increases
  • the relationship is directly proportional
  • doubling the length should approximately double the resistance

If the graph does not pass exactly through the origin, students should consider why.

Possible reasons include:

  • contact resistance
  • zero error in the length measurement
  • heating of the wire
  • poor connections
  • measurement uncertainty

This is a lovely opportunity to teach students that imperfect graphs are not failures. They are evidence to be analysed.


Why This Matters for GCSE Students

Students often lose marks in required practical questions because they know the basic method but not the reasoning behind it.

They might remember:

“Use a metre ruler and crocodile clip.”

But higher-level answers need more:

  • why length is the independent variable
  • why resistance is the dependent variable
  • why temperature must be controlled
  • why repeat readings are needed
  • why a jockey improves accuracy
  • why a graph is useful
  • why the wire should start at zero

The experiment is really about measurement quality.

That is why improving the apparatus is not just a nice extra. It supports the whole purpose of the practical.


Conclusion: Better Apparatus, Better Thinking

The resistance wire experiment is a classic GCSE Physics practical because it is simple, visual and mathematically useful. It links circuits, resistance, current, potential difference, gradients, proportionality and experimental method.

But simple experiments still deserve careful design.

Using a metre ruler and crocodile clips may be enough to show the basic trend, but it is not ideal if we want students to think seriously about accuracy and reproducibility.

By designing a ruler end that fixes the wire so the starting point is exactly at zero, and by using a jockey for a clearer contact point, we make the experiment more precise.

More importantly, we show students what practical physics is really about.

Not just getting an answer.

Getting a better answer.

And knowing why it is better.

20 May 2026

Why Correlation Does Not Mean Causation — The Statistics Trap That Catches Everyone

 


“Why Correlation Does Not Mean Causation — The Statistics Trap That Catches Everyone”

The A Level Statistics mistake that looks simple… until the exam asks you to explain it

One of the most common traps in A Level Statistics is not usually the calculation.

Many students can calculate a correlation coefficient. They can draw a scatter graph. They can add a line of best fit. They can say whether the correlation is positive, negative, strong, weak, or close to zero.

Then the exam question asks:

“What can you conclude?”

And that is where the danger begins.

Because statistics is not just about pressing buttons on a calculator. It is about interpreting evidence carefully.

The big idea is this:

Correlation shows that two variables are related. It does not prove that one variable causes the other.

That may sound simple, but it is one of the most important ideas in all of statistics.


The ice cream and drowning example

Here is the classic example.

In summer, ice cream sales increase.

In summer, the number of drowning incidents also tends to increase.

So, does eating ice cream cause drowning?

Of course not.

That would be a ridiculous conclusion. The real explanation is that both are affected by a third factor:

hot weather.

When the weather is hot, more people buy ice cream. Also, more people go swimming, visit beaches, go boating, or spend time near water. So the two variables may rise together, but that does not mean one causes the other.

This is the trap.

A graph may show a pattern.
The numbers may look convincing.
The correlation coefficient may be close to 1.

But that still does not prove causation.


What does correlation actually mean?

Correlation measures the strength and direction of a relationship between two variables.

For example, we might collect data on:

  • height and shoe size
  • hours of revision and test score
  • temperature and ice cream sales
  • engine size and fuel consumption
  • age of a car and resale value
  • time spent on a phone and hours of sleep

If the points on a scatter graph form a clear pattern, we may say there is correlation.

But correlation is only describing what appears to happen in the data.

It does not explain why it happens.

That is the important distinction.


Positive correlation

A positive correlation means that as one variable increases, the other variable tends to increase as well.

For example:

As revision time increases, test scores may tend to increase.

This seems sensible. A student who revises for longer may perform better.

But we still have to be careful.

It does not automatically prove that simply sitting with a textbook for more hours caused the better result. Other factors may be involved:

  • the quality of the revision
  • whether the student practised exam questions
  • prior knowledge
  • how well they slept
  • whether they had support from a teacher or tutor
  • how difficult the test was
  • how anxious they felt on the day

So even a sensible correlation must be interpreted carefully.

A good A Level answer would not say:

“More revision causes higher marks.”

A better answer would say:

“There appears to be a positive correlation between revision time and marks, but this does not prove causation. Other factors such as revision quality, prior ability, sleep, or exam technique may also affect the result.”

That second answer is much more statistical.


Negative correlation

A negative correlation means that as one variable increases, the other variable tends to decrease.

For example:

As the age of a car increases, its resale value tends to decrease.

This is a negative correlation.

Older cars are often worth less. Again, that makes sense.

But even here, we have to avoid being too simplistic. Age may be important, but it is not the only factor. A car’s value may also depend on:

  • mileage
  • condition
  • service history
  • rarity
  • fuel type
  • brand
  • demand in the second-hand market

So the age of the car may be strongly linked to value, but it may not be the whole explanation.

Statistics gives us evidence. It does not remove the need to think.


Zero or very weak correlation

Sometimes there is no clear pattern.

For example:

A student’s shoe size and their favourite music style.

There is no sensible reason to expect these to be connected. If we collected data, the scatter graph would probably look like a random cloud of points.

In an exam, students need to describe this carefully.

They might write:

“There appears to be little or no correlation between the two variables.”

This is better than saying:

“There is definitely no relationship.”

Why?

Because sample data is limited. We usually do not have perfect knowledge of an entire population. Statistics is often about making careful judgements from incomplete evidence.


The hidden third variable: the confounding variable

A confounding variable is an extra variable that may affect the relationship between the two variables being studied.

This is one of the main reasons why correlation does not prove causation.

In the ice cream example:

  • Variable 1: ice cream sales
  • Variable 2: drowning incidents
  • Confounding variable: hot weather

Hot weather affects both.

This makes it look as though ice cream sales and drowning incidents are directly connected, when actually they are both responding to something else.

This idea appears again and again in real life.


Example 1: Social media use and anxiety

Suppose a study finds that students who spend more time on social media also report higher anxiety levels.

It would be tempting to say:

“Social media causes anxiety.”

But that may be too simple.

Possible explanations include:

  • social media may increase anxiety
  • anxious students may use social media more often
  • poor sleep may increase both social media use and anxiety
  • exam pressure may increase anxiety and phone use
  • loneliness may lead to more online activity and more anxiety

The correlation may be real, but the cause is not automatically clear.

This is exactly the kind of example where A Level students need to use careful language.


Example 2: Coffee and productivity

Suppose office workers who drink more coffee complete more work.

Does coffee cause productivity?

Possibly. But other explanations exist.

Maybe:

  • people with demanding jobs drink more coffee
  • productive people work longer hours and therefore drink more coffee
  • morning people drink coffee and are already more alert
  • workplace culture affects both coffee drinking and output

Again, the correlation may be interesting, but it is not proof.


Example 3: Class size and exam results

Suppose schools with smaller classes achieve better exam results.

Does a smaller class size cause better results?

It may help, but we need to be cautious.

Other factors may include:

  • school funding
  • parental support
  • prior attainment
  • quality of teaching
  • access to resources
  • attendance
  • student motivation

This is a good example for parents, because it shows how educational statistics can be misleading when used too casually.

A headline might say:

“Smaller classes improve results.”

But a statistician would ask:

“What else could explain the pattern?”

That question is at the heart of good statistical thinking.


Example 4: Exercise and life expectancy

Suppose people who exercise more tend to live longer.

This sounds reasonable, and there may well be a causal link. But even here, we still have to think.

People who exercise more may also:

  • eat more healthily
  • smoke less
  • have higher income
  • have better access to healthcare
  • have more leisure time
  • already be healthier to begin with

This does not mean exercise is unimportant. It means that a simple correlation alone is not enough to prove the full cause.

To prove causation properly, researchers need more careful study designs.


Why this matters in A Level Maths

In A Level Statistics, students are often asked to interpret data, not just calculate with it.

This may involve:

  • scatter diagrams
  • correlation coefficients
  • regression lines
  • hypothesis tests
  • sampling
  • large data sets
  • real-world contexts

Students may lose marks because their conclusion is too strong.

For example, they may write:

“This proves that temperature causes ice cream sales to increase.”

Depending on the context, that may be too definite.

A safer and more statistically correct answer might be:

“The data suggests a positive association between temperature and ice cream sales. This may indicate that higher temperatures are linked with increased ice cream sales, but further evidence would be needed to establish causation.”

That is the difference between a casual answer and an A Level answer.


Exam language students should use

A Level examiners like careful, precise language.

Useful phrases include:

“There appears to be…”

“The data suggests…”

“There is evidence of an association between…”

“This does not necessarily imply causation…”

“A possible confounding variable is…”

“Other factors may have influenced the result…”

“Further investigation would be needed…”

These phrases are not just decoration. They show that the student understands what statistics can and cannot prove.


Phrases students should avoid

Students should be careful with words such as:

  • proves
  • definitely
  • always
  • causes
  • guarantees
  • must mean

For example, this is usually too strong:

“The graph proves that more screen time causes worse sleep.”

A better answer would be:

“The graph suggests a negative association between screen time and sleep duration. However, this does not prove that screen time causes reduced sleep, as other factors such as stress, workload, or bedtime routine may also be involved.”

This kind of answer shows maturity.

It also sounds like a statistician.


Correlation coefficient: what does it really tell us?

At A Level, students often calculate or interpret the product moment correlation coefficient, usually written as r.

The value of r lies between -1 and 1.

  • r close to 1 means strong positive correlation
  • r close to -1 means strong negative correlation
  • r close to 0 means little or no linear correlation

But here is the key point:

Even if r is very close to 1 or -1, this still does not prove causation.

A strong correlation may be very useful. It may allow predictions. It may suggest an important relationship. But it does not, by itself, explain the cause.

This is where many students make mistakes.

They see a strong value of r and assume they are allowed to make a strong causal statement.

They are not.


Regression lines: useful, but dangerous if misunderstood

Regression lines are used to model the relationship between two variables.

For example, we might use a regression line to estimate a student’s test score based on revision time.

This can be useful, but students need to remember three important warnings.

1. The prediction is only an estimate

A regression line gives a model, not a guarantee.

A student who revises for 10 hours is not guaranteed to get a specific mark.

2. The model may not apply outside the data range

This is called extrapolation.

If the data only includes students who revised between 1 and 10 hours, it may be dangerous to use the model to predict the score for someone who revised for 50 hours.

The relationship may not continue in the same way.

3. The regression line does not prove causation

Even if the line fits the data well, it still only describes the relationship in the data.

It does not prove why the relationship exists.


A simple classroom example

Imagine a tutor collects data from ten students:

Hours revisedTest score
128
235
342
448
555
663
768
875
979
1084

This shows a clear positive correlation.

It would be reasonable to say:

“Students who revised for longer tended to achieve higher test scores.”

But it would be too strong to say:

“Every extra hour of revision caused the mark to increase.”

Why?

Because not all revision is equal.

One student may spend three hours carefully working through past paper questions and correcting mistakes. Another may spend three hours copying notes while half-watching videos on their phone.

The time is the same. The quality is not.

This is one of the reasons why statistics needs interpretation.


What parents need to know

For parents supporting students through A Level Maths, this topic is worth understanding.

A Level Statistics is not just about arithmetic. It is about judgement.

Students need to learn how to:

  • interpret graphs
  • question conclusions
  • identify missing information
  • spot misleading claims
  • understand uncertainty
  • explain results clearly

This is also why statistics is so valuable beyond school.

Every day, we are surrounded by claims based on data:

  • “This diet improves concentration.”
  • “This school gets better results.”
  • “This app improves productivity.”
  • “This revision method doubles success.”
  • “This lifestyle choice increases happiness.”

Some claims may be true. Some may be exaggerated. Some may confuse correlation with causation.

A student who understands statistics is better equipped to question the world intelligently.


Why students often find this difficult

Many students find this topic harder than expected because it feels less mechanical than pure maths.

In pure maths, a question may have a clear method:

Differentiate this.
Solve this equation.
Find this integral.
Prove this identity.

But statistics often asks:

What does this mean?
Is this conclusion justified?
What assumptions are being made?
What else could explain the result?

That requires a different kind of thinking.

Some students are good at calculations but weaker at written interpretation. Others understand the idea verbally but struggle to phrase it in exam language.

That is why this topic is ideal for one-to-one teaching. A tutor can help the student move from:

“I know what I mean…”

to:

“I can write it clearly enough to get the mark.”


How to answer exam questions on correlation

Here is a simple structure students can use.

Step 1: Describe the relationship

Say whether the correlation is positive, negative, strong, weak, or absent.

Example:

“There appears to be a strong positive correlation between hours revised and test score.”

Step 2: Avoid claiming proof

Do not say it proves one variable causes the other.

Example:

“However, this does not prove that revision time alone caused the higher scores.”

Step 3: Suggest another factor

Identify a possible confounding variable.

Example:

“Other factors such as revision quality, prior ability, teaching support, sleep, or exam technique may also affect performance.”

Step 4: Use cautious language

Use “suggests”, “appears”, “is associated with”, or “may”.

Example:

“The data suggests an association, but further evidence would be needed before making a causal conclusion.”

This four-step structure can turn a vague answer into a strong statistical explanation.


Worked example: screen time and sleep

Suppose an exam question says:

A group of students recorded their daily screen time and the number of hours they slept. The data showed a negative correlation.

A weak answer might be:

“Screen time causes students to sleep less.”

A better answer:

“There appears to be a negative correlation between screen time and hours of sleep, meaning that students with higher screen time tended to sleep for fewer hours. However, this does not prove that screen time caused the reduction in sleep. Other factors such as stress, homework, caffeine intake, bedtime routine, or general lifestyle may also affect sleep.”

This answer is much stronger because it describes the pattern and avoids overclaiming.


Worked example: exercise and exam performance

Suppose a study finds that students who exercise more also tend to get higher exam results.

A poor answer:

“Exercise improves exam results.”

A better answer:

“The data suggests a positive association between exercise and exam results. However, this does not necessarily mean that exercise caused the higher results. Students who exercise regularly may also have better routines, sleep patterns, motivation, or general wellbeing, which could also influence exam performance.”

This is the sort of answer that shows real understanding.


A useful phrase to remember

A simple phrase students can remember is:

“Correlation describes a pattern. Causation explains a reason.”

That is the heart of the topic.

Correlation tells us that two things appear to move together.

Causation says that one thing directly affects the other.

Those are not the same.


Why statistics can mislead us

Statistics is powerful, but it can also be misused.

Sometimes this happens by accident. Sometimes people simply do not understand the limitations of the data.

But sometimes statistics is used deliberately to make a claim sound stronger than it really is.

A graph can be persuasive.
A percentage can sound impressive.
A correlation can look scientific.

But a good student asks:

  • What data was collected?
  • How large was the sample?
  • Was the sample representative?
  • Are there outliers?
  • Is the relationship linear?
  • Could there be a confounding variable?
  • Does the evidence actually support the conclusion?

This is why A Level Statistics is such an important part of Maths.

It teaches students not just how to calculate, but how to think.


How private tuition can help with this topic

In lessons, this is a topic where discussion is just as important as calculation.

A student may be able to find the value of r, but still not know what to write afterwards.

That is where guided practice helps.

A useful lesson might include:

  • interpreting several scatter graphs
  • comparing strong and weak correlations
  • writing exam-style conclusions
  • identifying confounding variables
  • correcting badly worded answers
  • discussing real examples from education, health, business, and psychology
  • practising calculator techniques for correlation and regression

The aim is not just to get the answer.

The aim is to know what the answer means.

That is often the difference between a student who can “do the method” and a student who can gain the final interpretation marks.


Conclusion: the graph is only the beginning

Correlation is one of the most useful ideas in statistics, but it is also one of the easiest to misuse.

A scatter graph may show a relationship.
A correlation coefficient may measure that relationship.
A regression line may help us make predictions.

But none of these automatically proves cause and effect.

That is the lesson students need to remember.

Correlation can suggest a connection. It can guide further investigation. It can help us make predictions. But it cannot, by itself, prove causation.

So the next time you see two variables rising together, remember the ice cream example.

Ice cream sales rise.
Drowning incidents rise.
But ice cream is not pushing anyone into the sea.

Statistics is not just about numbers.

It is about learning to be careful with conclusions.

And that is exactly why it matters.

19 May 2026

Calculating the Speed of Sound: From Echoes to Interference Patterns

 


Calculating the Speed of Sound: From Echoes to Interference Patterns

Two Ways to Measure the Speed of Sound: Echoes, Speakers, Maxima and Minima (This is the experiment I taught to my students last night)

Sound is invisible, which is one reason students often find waves difficult. You cannot see the wavefronts travelling across the room. You cannot watch the compressions and rarefactions moving through the air.

But with a simple echo experiment, or two loudspeakers placed 30 cm apart, you can turn invisible sound waves into something measurable.

That is where the physics becomes rather satisfying.

You start with something ordinary — a clap, a wall, two speakers, or a steady tone — and end up calculating one of the most important wave speeds in school physics:

v=fλv = f\lambda

The speed of sound in air is about:

340 m s1

at room temperature.

The real challenge is not usually the equation. The real challenge is knowing what distance to measure, what time to use, and how the wave pattern connects to wavelength.


Part 1: The Echo Experiment

The Basic Idea

In an echo experiment, a sound travels from you to a wall and then reflects back.

That means the sound does not just travel the distance to the wall.

It travels:

there and back\text{there and back}

So if you stand 50 m from a wall, the sound travels:

50+50=100 m50 + 50 = 100 \text{ m}

This is the part students often forget.

They measure the distance to the wall, use the time for the echo, and then forget to double the distance. That gives them a speed of sound that is roughly half what it should be.


The Echo Formula

The general speed equation is:

v=distancetime​

For an echo:

v=2dtv = \frac{2d}{t}

where:

  • vv = speed of sound in m/s
  • dd = distance from the sound source to the wall
  • tt,= time taken for the echo to return

Example 1: Simple Echo Calculation

A student stands 85 m from a large wall. They clap and hear the echo 0.50 s later.

Calculate the speed of sound.

The sound travels to the wall and back:

2d=2×85=170 m2d = 2 \times 85 = 170 \text{ m}

Now use:

v=2dtv = \frac{2d}{t} v=1700.50v = \frac{170}{0.50} v=340 m s1v = 340 \text{ m s}^{-1}

So the speed of sound is:

340 m s1\boxed{340 \text{ m s}^{-1}}

Why Echo Experiments Can Be Tricky

The echo experiment looks simple, but there are several practical problems.

1. Human reaction time

If you use a stopwatch, your reaction time may be a significant source of error. A typical human reaction time is around 0.2 s, which is large compared with the time taken for an echo to return.

2. The distance must be large enough

If the wall is too close, the echo returns too quickly. The sound and its echo may blur together.

A distance of 10 m is usually too small for a good school experiment. A large wall, cliff, building, or sports hall end wall works better.

3. Repeating echoes improves accuracy

A better method is to time several echoes, if possible.

For example, if the time for 10 echoes is measured, then:

time for one echo=total time10​

This reduces the percentage error.


Part 2: The Two-Speaker Experiment

Now we move to something more interesting.

Suppose we have two speakers placed:

30 cm apart30 \text{ cm apart}

That is:

0.30 m0.30 \text{ m}

Both speakers are connected to the same signal generator, so they produce the same frequency sound waves in phase.

A student walks along a line about:

1.5 m

away from the speakers.

As they move, they hear places where the sound is louder and places where the sound is quieter.

These are called:

  • maxima: loud sounds
  • minima: quiet sounds

This happens because of interference.


What Is Interference?

When two waves meet, they superpose.

That means their displacements add together.

Constructive interference

If the waves arrive in step, compression meets compression and rarefaction meets rarefaction.

The sound becomes louder.

This produces a maximum.

Constructive interference occurs when the path difference is:

0,λ,2λ,3λ...0, \lambda, 2\lambda, 3\lambda...

or:

nλ

where nn is a whole number.


Destructive interference

If the waves arrive out of step, a compression from one speaker meets a rarefaction from the other.

The waves partly cancel.

The sound becomes quieter.

This produces a minimum.

Destructive interference occurs when the path difference is:

λ2,3λ2,5λ2...

or:

(n+12)λ

Why Do You Hear Loud and Quiet Regions?

As you walk across the room, your distance from each speaker changes.

At some positions, you are the same distance from both speakers. The waves arrive together and you hear a loud sound.

At other positions, one wave has travelled half a wavelength further than the other. The waves arrive out of phase and you hear a quieter sound.

So the loud and quiet pattern is really a map of the wavelength.

Once we know the wavelength, we can calculate the speed of sound using:

v=fλv = f\lambda

The Key Equation for the Two-Speaker Pattern

For two coherent sound sources:

fringe spacing=λLd\text{fringe spacing} = \frac{\lambda L}{d}

This can be rearranged to find wavelength:

λ=xdL​

where:

  • xx = distance between neighbouring loud regions, or neighbouring quiet regions
  • dd = distance between the two speakers
  • LL = distance from the speakers to the walking line
  • λ\lambda = wavelength of the sound

In this example:

d=0.30 md = 0.30 \text{ m}
L=1.5 mL = 1.5 \text{ m}

So:

λ=x×0.301.5\lambda = \frac{x \times 0.30}{1.5} λ=x5\lambda = \frac{x}{5}

Once we know xx, we can find λ\lambda, and then:

v=fλv = f\lambda

Example 2: Finding the Speed of Sound from Two Speakers


Two speakers are placed 0.30 m apart. A student walks along a line 1.5 m away from the speakers. The distance between neighbouring loud regions is 1.70 m. The frequency is 1000 Hz.

Calculate the speed of sound.

First find the wavelength:

λ=xdL\lambda = \frac{xd}{L} λ=1.70×0.301.5\lambda = \frac{1.70 \times 0.30}{1.5} λ=0.34 m\lambda = 0.34 \text{ m}

Now:

v=fλv = f\lambda
v=1000×0.34v = 1000 \times 0.34
v=340 m s1v = 340 \text{ m s}^{-1}

So:

v=340 m s1\boxed{v = 340 \text{ m s}^{-1}}

That is a sensible value for the speed of sound in air.


The Important Teaching Point

This is where I often slow students down.

The equation:

v=fλv = f\lambda

is not difficult.

What matters is understanding what the wavelength actually is.

In the two-speaker experiment, you are not measuring the wavelength directly with a ruler. You are measuring the spacing between loud or quiet positions, then using the geometry of the experiment to calculate the wavelength.

That is why this experiment is so useful for A Level students. It forces them to connect:

  • wave theory
  • path difference
  • phase difference
  • experimental measurement
  • geometry
  • the wave equation

This is where physics becomes more than formula substitution.


Maxima and Minima: What Students Must Remember

Loud sounds: maxima

A loud sound happens when the path difference is:

nλn\lambda

Examples:

0,λ,2λ,3λ

This is constructive interference.


Quiet sounds: minima

A quiet sound happens when the path difference is:

(n+12)λ\left(n+\frac{1}{2}\right)\lambda

Examples:

λ2,3λ2,5λ2​

This is destructive interference.


A Practical Way to Run the Experiment

Equipment

You need:

  • two loudspeakers
  • signal generator
  • metre ruler or tape measure
  • measuring tape for the walking line
  • possibly a sound level meter app
  • a quiet room
  • a steady frequency, such as 800 Hz to 1200 Hz

The speakers should be connected so they produce the same frequency and remain in phase.


Method

  1. Place the two speakers 0.30 m apart.
  2. Set the signal generator to a known frequency, for example 1000 Hz.
  3. Mark a walking line 1.5 m away from the speakers.
  4. Walk slowly along the line.
  5. Mark the positions where the sound is loudest.
  6. Measure the distance between neighbouring loud positions.
  7. Use:
λ=xdL\lambda = \frac{xd}{L}
  1. Then calculate:
v=fλv = f\lambda

Why Using a Sound Meter Can Help

The human ear is good at detecting changes in loudness, but it is not always precise.

Students can argue about where the maximum is.

One student says, “It is loudest here.”

Another says, “No, it is louder over there.”

A sound meter app or data logger can make the experiment more objective. The student can walk slowly along the line and record sound intensity.

This also makes a good graphing exercise.

You can plot:

sound intensity against position\text{sound intensity against position}

The peaks show the maxima.

The troughs show the minima.

This is especially useful for students who find wave diagrams abstract. They can see the interference pattern as data.


Common Student Mistakes

Mistake 1: Forgetting to double the distance in the echo experiment

For echoes:

v=2dtv = \frac{2d}{t}

not:

v=dtv = \frac{d}{t}

The sound goes to the wall and back.


Mistake 2: Using centimetres instead of metres

The speaker separation is:

30 cm30 \text{ cm}

but in calculations it should be:

0.30 m0.30 \text{ m}

This is a classic A Level error.


Mistake 3: Confusing frequency and wavelength

Frequency is set by the signal generator.

Wavelength is found from the interference pattern.

Then:

v=fλv = f\lambda

Mistake 4: Measuring from a loud point to a quiet point

The spacing xx in:

x=λLdx = \frac{\lambda L}{d}

usually means the distance between two neighbouring maxima, or two neighbouring minima.

If you measure from a maximum to the next minimum, that is only half the fringe spacing.

That would give the wrong wavelength unless you account for it.


Mistake 5: Expecting perfect results

School experiments rarely give exactly 340 m/s.

You might get:

320 m s1320 \text{ m s}^{-1}

or:

360 m s1360 \text{ m s}^{-1}

That does not necessarily mean the experiment has failed. It may reflect measurement uncertainty, room reflections, background noise, speaker phase differences, or difficulty locating the exact maxima.

A good physics student should be able to discuss uncertainty, not just calculate an answer.


Why This Topic Matters at A Level

This topic is a beautiful example of why A Level Physics becomes more demanding than GCSE.

At GCSE, many students can survive by remembering equations.

At A Level, they need to understand the model behind the equation.

The speed of sound experiments involve:

  • wave speed
  • frequency
  • wavelength
  • phase
  • path difference
  • interference
  • experimental uncertainty
  • practical skills

That is a lot packed into one topic.

It also links strongly to other areas of the course, including:

  • Young’s double-slit experiment
  • microwave interference
  • stationary waves
  • diffraction gratings
  • superposition
  • acoustic resonance

Once a student understands sound interference, light interference becomes less mysterious.


A Personal Reflection from Teaching

This is exactly the sort of topic where students often say, “I know the equation, but I do not know what to do with it.”

That sentence is very revealing.

It means the student has memorised the formula but has not yet built the physical picture.

In tuition, I would usually start with the echo method because it is concrete. The student can imagine the sound travelling to the wall and back.

Then I would move to the two-speaker experiment. I might draw the speakers, draw the walking line, and ask:

“Why is it loud here but quiet there?”

Once the student sees that the two sounds have travelled different distances, the whole topic begins to make sense.

The moment they realise that loud and quiet regions are caused by path difference, not by random changes in speaker volume, is often the breakthrough.


A Good Exam-Style Question

Two loudspeakers are placed 0.30 m apart and connected to the same signal generator. A student walks along a line 1.5 m from the speakers. The distance between two adjacent loud positions is 1.65 m. The frequency of the sound is 1020 Hz.

Calculate the speed of sound.

Step 1: Use the fringe spacing equation

λ=xdL\lambda = \frac{xd}{L} λ=1.65×0.301.5\lambda = \frac{1.65 \times 0.30}{1.5} λ=0.33 m\lambda = 0.33 \text{ m}

Step 2: Use the wave equation

v=fλv = f\lambda
v=1020×0.33v = 1020 \times 0.33
v=336.6 m s1v = 336.6 \text{ m s}^{-1}

So:

v337 m s1\boxed{v \approx 337 \text{ m s}^{-1}}

That is a realistic experimental value.


Why Parents Should Care About This Sort of Question

For parents looking at A Level tuition, this is a useful example of the difference between getting through the homework and really understanding the subject.

A student may be able to write:

v=fλ

but still not understand:

  • where the wavelength came from
  • why the sound gets louder and quieter
  • why the echo distance must be doubled
  • why maxima and minima depend on path difference
  • why practical results are not always perfect

Good tuition does not simply provide answers. It helps students build the reasoning process that allows them to approach unfamiliar questions with confidence.

That is especially important at A Level, where the most difficult questions often combine several ideas at once.


Conclusion: Sound Waves Are Invisible, but Not Unmeasurable

The speed of sound can be found in more than one way.

With an echo experiment, the sound travels to a wall and back:

v=2dtv = \frac{2d}{t}

With two speakers, the loud and quiet regions reveal the wavelength:

λ=xdL\lambda = \frac{xd}{L}

Then the speed is found using:

v=fλv = f\lambda

Both experiments teach the same deeper lesson: physics is not just about equations. It is about understanding what the equation means in the real world.

That is why practical work is so powerful. It turns abstract ideas into something students can hear, measure, calculate, and finally understand.

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