Questions tagged [acoustics]

Acoustics is the interdisciplinary science that deals with the study of all mechanical waves in gases, liquids, and solids including vibration, sound, ultrasound and infrasound. Applications of acoustics are for instance the audio and noise control industries.

When to Use this Tag

Use when asking questions about the generation, propagation, or absorption of elastic waves in solids, liquids, or gases. For similar problems of wave motion in the electro-magnetic field, use the tag .

Introduction

Acoustic waves may exist in any elastic medium which is capable of experiencing compression and rarefaction. This is manifestly true in the case of liquids and gases. However even solids, which are often taken to be perfectly incompressible, can sustain small oscillations of their constituent atoms about some mean position which enables wave propagation throughout the material. Generally speaking, the higher the compressibility of a material, the lower its speed of sound.

Equations of Motion

Wave motion in a variety of different contexts is governed by the classical acoustic wave equation

$$ \frac{\partial^2\phi}{\partial t^2} - c^2\nabla^2\phi = 0 $$

where $\phi$ may represent the local displacement of a solid structure, acoustic pressure in a fluid, etc., and $c$ is the speed of sound in the medium. This linear partial differential equation has been derived on the hypothesis that the perturbation quantity $\phi$ is small relative to a mean value. Generalizations to this equation may be obtained which incorporate more exotic physical effects such as dispersion, convection of acoustic energy, and nonlinear wave steepening.

Prerequisites for Studying Acoustics

Phys: Some exposure to rigid body dynamics and fluid mechanics

Math: Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs), Partial Differential Equations (PDEs)

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Can I compute the mass of a coin based on the sound of its fall?

The other day, I bumped my bookshelf and a coin fell down. This gave me an idea. Is it possible to compute the mass of a coin, based on the sound emitted when it falls? I think that there should be a way to do it. But how?
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Why are the harmonics of a piano tone not multiples of the base frequency?

I was trying to figure out which piano keys were being played in an audio recording using spectral analysis, and I noticed that the harmonics are not integer multiple of the base note. What is the reason for this? Take a look at the spectrogram of…
Szabolcs
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What is the speed of sound in space?

Given that space is not a perfect vacuum, what is the speed of sound therein? Google was not very helpful in this regard, as the only answer I found was $300\,{\rm km}\,{\rm s}^{-1}$, from Astronomy Cafe, which is not a source I'd be willing to…
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How can a black hole produce sound?

I was reading this article from NASA -- it's NASA -- and literally found myself perplexed. The article describes the discovery that black holes emit a "note" that has physical ramifications on the detritus around it. Sept. 9, 2003: Astronomers…
Aarthi
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Why does fire make very little sound?

Sound is air particles vibrating (thus hitting each other to make longitudinal waves) and heat is the vibration of air molecules. Because we can only assume that heat made from fire is a higher intensity of vibration than sound (because we don't…
yolo
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Do low frequency sounds really carry longer distances?

It is a common belief that low frequencies travel longer distances. Indeed, the bass is really what you hear when the neighbor plays his HiFi loud (Woom Woom). Try asking people around, a lot of them believe that low sounds carry longer…
Max
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Why can we distinguish different pitches in a chord but not different hues of light?

In music, when two or more pitches are played together at the same time, they form a chord. If each pitch has a corresponding wave frequency (a pure, or fundamental, tone), the pitches played together make a superposition waveform, which is obtained…
chharvey
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If water is incompressible, how can sound propagate underwater?

Since sound travels as longitudinal waves, sound waves should only be able to propagate in a medium through compressions and rarefactions. However, water, as a liquid, is generally treated as an incompressible fluid. Since compression is essential…
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Why don't choir voices destructively interfere so that we can't hear them?

Sound is propagated by waves. Waves can interfere. Suppose there are two tenors standing next to each other and each singing a continuous middle-C. Will it be the case that some people in the audience cannot hear them because of interference?…
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Why do power lines buzz?

When near high tension power lines, particularly after a good rain, the lines themselves emit a buzzing noise. A similar noise can be heard coming out of the electric meters attached to my apartment. I've heard before that this is supposedly from…
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Why does our voice sound different on inhaling helium?

This question (and answer) is an attempt to clear the air on what appears to be a very simple issue, with conflicting or unclear explanations on the internet. Arguments, negations, etc are invited. I'm classifying this as a physics question, since…
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Why aren't the lengths of the bars on a toy glockenspiel proportional to the wavelengths?

As you might already know, frequency of musical notes is arranged in a such a way that if, for example, an A note has frequency of $x$, another A note which is placed one octave higher would produce frequency of $2x$. So here's my childhood toy…
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Why doesn't oil produce sound when poured?

I've noticed that unlike other liquids, when pouring olive oil for example, I don't hear any sound at all from it. Usually you can hear an audible sound as a cup gets filled with water, as the sound increases in pitch. What makes the oil behave this…
Moshe
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Why does sound absorption in oceans depend on the pH?

I was reading "The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History", by Elizabeth Kolbert, and there she comments that high level of $CO_{2}$ in the atmosphere lowers the pH of oceans (which makes sense) and, consequently, diminishes sound absorption: WHY…
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The speed of sound is a single value yet the speed of atoms is distributed over many values. Does the sound wave front smear out?

Sound waves travel with constant speed, but air molecules that transfer action move with different speeds than the ones described by Maxwell distribution. Why does the sound wave not smear out and dissipate quickly? UPDATE. It is not just that…
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