0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Each emits an identical sound-wave , perfectly out of sync . All sound is perfectly cancelled out
in a perfectly sound-reflective room
sonar for the blind . ... . The subject would hear nothing , until an object approached
The return wave's characteristics would reveal the direction and distance to nearby objects
All sound is perfectly cancelled out .
Where does the energy put into the emitted sound-waves go ?
Phoebe asked the Naked Scientists: If there are multiple sources of sound in a particular area - say 20 sources of air conditioning units, each creating about 60 Decibels of sound, does this create more sound (and a louder sound) in the same way that lighting multiple candles creates more light?What do you think?
... If the blind person moves , or turns themselves , the return-patterns should change , thus indicating the object's direction/distance . It is a stereo effect ...
However , considering that a sound is a unique frequency of crests and troughs , no one sound would be any louder , just the total noise recieved by the ear . P.M.
What I always find astonishing is the ability of the brain to decode a single continuous pressure waveform into separate frequencies and identify musical instruments or individual voices, even when the bandwidth is severely limited. And one question I'd like to investigate in my next life is whether somebody who had never heard the individual instruments would be able to decode the sound of a string quartet.
The hair cells in the organ of Corti are tuned to certain sound frequencies by way of their location in the cochlea, due to the degree of stiffness in the basilar membrane.[4] This stiffness is due to, among other things, the thickness and width of the basilar membrane,[5] which along the length of the cochlea is stiffest nearest its beginning at the oval window, where the stapes introduces the vibrations coming from the eardrum. Since its stiffness is high there, it allows only high-frequency vibrations to move the basilar membrane, and thus the hair cells. The farther a wave travels towards the cochlea's apex (the helicotrema), the less stiff the basilar membrane is; thus lower frequencies travel down the tube, and the less-stiff membrane is moved most easily by them where the reduced stiffness allows: that is, as the basilar membrane gets less and less stiff, waves slow down and it responds better to lower frequencies. In addition, in mammals, the cochlea is coiled, which has been shown to enhance low-frequency vibrations as they travel through the fluid-filled coil.[6] This spatial arrangement of sound reception is referred to as tonotopy.