Question:

If a stretched wire is vibrating in the second overtone, then the number of nodes and antinodes between the ends of the string are respectively

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For the \(n\)-th harmonic of a string fixed at both ends: - Total Nodes = \(n + 1\) - Nodes between ends = \(n - 1\) - Antinodes = \(n\)
Updated On: May 6, 2026
  • 2 and 2
  • 1 and 2
  • 4 and 3
  • 2 and 3
  • 3 and 4
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

Concept: In a stretched string fixed at both ends, the vibration modes are defined as harmonics.
Fundamental (1st Harmonic): The string vibrates in one loop. Nodes are at the ends.
1st Overtone (2nd Harmonic): The string vibrates in two loops.
2nd Overtone (3rd Harmonic): The string vibrates in three loops.

Step 1:
Identify the mode of vibration for the second overtone.
For a string fixed at both ends, the \(n\)-th harmonic is the \((n-1)\)-th overtone. Therefore, the second overtone corresponds to the third harmonic. In the third harmonic, the string vibrates in exactly three loops.

Step 2:
Count the nodes and antinodes between the ends.
For 3 loops in a string fixed at both ends:
Total Nodes: There are 4 nodes in total (2 at the fixed ends and 2 in the middle).
Nodes between the ends: Excluding the fixed boundary ends, there are 2 nodes.
Total Antinodes: Each loop contains one antinode. For 3 loops, there are 3 antinodes.
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