Understanding the Mechanics of Sound Travel: A Physics Perspective

In summary, sound travels through the propagation of 3-dimensional pressure waves, caused by the vibration of particles in the media. It can be explained by kinetic and electric forces, but its biological importance is intimately connected with the evolution of the ear. Sound is not a fundamental form of energy, but rather a form of power and its perception is logarithmic. Its speed is influenced by temperature and the mean speed of air molecules is around 500 m/s at 15 degrees Celsius.
  • #1
jobyts
227
64
How does sound travel?

Does sound travel merely by vibration of particles in the media? To my imagination, the sound propagates as follows:

The atom/molecule close to the sound source moves towards the neighbouring sides. The repulsion from one electron in the atom moves the electron in the neighbouring atom. Also, the repulsion from one nucleus causes the neighbouring nuclueus to vibrate.

Is the above statement true? If so, sound should be explained by kinetic and electric forces, right? Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band). I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...

Thanks,
.joby
 
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  • #2
jobyts said:
Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band). I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...

I would say yes.

As far as the physics goes, sound is no different from any other sort of wave propagation.

Of course the biology and psychology of sound are separate areas of study, where sound is considered from the point of view as "what you hear" as well as "what is measured by physics lab equipment".
 
  • #3
jobyts said:
Does sound travel merely by vibration of particles in the media? To my imagination, the sound propagates as follows:

The atom/molecule close to the sound source moves towards the neighbouring sides. The repulsion from one electron in the atom moves the electron in the neighbouring atom. Also, the repulsion from one nucleus causes the neighbouring nuclueus to vibrate.

Is the above statement true? If so, sound should be explained by kinetic and electric forces, right? Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band). I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...

Thanks,
.joby

You are correct.
 
  • #4
AlephZero said:
Of course the biology and psychology of sound are separate areas of study, where sound is considered from the point of view as "what you hear" as well as "what is measured by physics lab equipment".
I've never heard (no joke intended) of that differentiation. The psychology aspect makes sense, but from a biological standpoint the body still responds to both infrasound and ultrasound even if we don't 'hear' it. Since it's not a phenomenon that can be ignored, do biologists refer to it by another term if it's inaudible? (That isn't a facetious question; I really don't know.)
 
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  • #5
jobyts said:
Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band).

While you are correct that it is just mechanical and electrical movement of particles, I think you are missing the connection between it and the biological importance of it. Sound was present and ears evolved in order to hear it to gather more information and thus to survive more efficiently, much in the same way that light was present and then eyes evolved to take advantage of it. The presence of sound is intimately entwined with the evolution of the ear. It didnt "just happen to be so".
 
  • #6
Good point. I totally missed that part of the question.
It's similar to 'creationists' pointing out that Earth is perfectly designed for human life. Of course it it, because we evolved to fit our environment. If our ancestral microbes had been on Mars, then that would be perfectly designed for us.
 
  • #7
TestUser12 said:
While you are correct that it is just mechanical and electrical movement of particles, I think you are missing the connection between it and the biological importance of it. Sound was present and ears evolved in order to hear it to gather more information and thus to survive more efficiently, much in the same way that light was present and then eyes evolved to take advantage of it. The presence of sound is intimately entwined with the evolution of the ear. It didnt "just happen to be so".

True. I should admit, when I think deep into physics and chemistry, I just feel myself as just a bunch of atoms and subatomic particles, grouped together by some interatomic forces. That makes me miss some other important aspects, but you know, helps me less fearful about my own death:)

Thanks for reminding.
 
  • #8
jobyts said:
That makes me miss some other important aspects, but you know, helps me less fearful about my own death:)

The only comfort for an Atheist. (Well, the multi-verse concept works very well for me. I've already died hundreds of trillions of times in other quantum branches... but I'm still alive in the one that I'm conscious of.)
 
  • #9
jobyts said:
Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band). I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...
I don't think energy really has any fundamental form.
 
  • #10
jobyts said:
I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...

'Sound' isn't energy at all; it's our interpretation of pressure waves, which are very real but not 'fundamental' in the way that you mean. The propogation thereof does, of course, depend upon the atomic structure of the conductive medium.
I can't help bringing up the old question: 'If Helen Keller fell over in a forest, would anyone hear it?'
 
  • #11
Sound travels as 3-dimensional pressure waves. This wiki article covers the basics:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound

sound isn't energy
Sound is a form of power, again I refer to a Wiki article:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_power

Decible system:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decibel

Hearing is bascially logarithmic, a 10db increase in sound level is perceived to be a doubling in "loudness".

http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dB.html

Another tidbit of info: The "mean" speed of air molecules at around 15C is about 500 m/s, faster than the speed of sound which is 340m/s (at 15C).

from a biological standpoint the body still responds to both infrasound and ultrasound even if we don't 'hear' it.
Maybe parts of the body, but once below or above a frequency range, the movement of the eardrum is either too slow or too small to stimulate any significant response by the nerves that respond to sounds, regardless of the power. A person could physically feel very powerful low frequency sound waves, but wouldn't be able to hear them, similarly a person could get heated up by microwaves, but wouldn't be able to see them.
 
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  • #12
Danger said:
The propogation thereof does, of course, depend upon the atomic structure of the conductive medium.

Can I say the sound frequency is also a factor of the medium? Can I make an an ultrasound wave human-audible by passing it through a different medium?
Also, does the frequency change over a distance?
 
  • #13
jobyts said:
Can I say the sound frequency is also a factor of the medium? Can I make an an ultrasound wave human-audible by passing it through a different medium?
Also, does the frequency change over a distance?

Distance alone attenuates amplitude, but doesn't change frequency.

I can't remember whether mediums affect frequency. I want to say no, it just affects propagation speed.
 
  • #14
jobyts said:
Does sound travel merely by vibration of particles in the media? To my imagination, the sound propagates as follows:

The atom/molecule close to the sound source moves towards the neighbouring sides. The repulsion from one electron in the atom moves the electron in the neighbouring atom. Also, the repulsion from one nucleus causes the neighbouring nuclueus to vibrate.

Is the above statement true? If so, sound should be explained by kinetic and electric forces, right? Can I say sound energy is just another mechanical/electrical movement of particles and it just happened to have a big biological importance (our ear cells can respond to some frequency band). I mean, in physics, sound is not a fundamental form of energy like charge, light etc...

DaveC426913 said:
You are correct.

i don't think that charge is a fundamental form of energy, is it? it's a pretty fundamental property of some particles of matter.

this thing with atoms repulsing each other is something that happens in air (or some fluid) even when there is no sound. i think the best way to understand it is with the ideal gas law, Newton's laws, and the continuity equation. you can set up a wave equation and solve it.
 
  • #15
I agree with Pythagorean about that; I also don't know about any medium which alters the pitch. As for distance, it does in one regard: if the source and the listener are moving toward or away from each other, the Doppler shift changes the frequency.
 
  • #16
This whole pressure wave thing is passe.

The modern model is that sound travels in discrete little bundles called mp3 players.
 
  • #17
Wow! I never saw the papers on that one. If it turns out that sound really is quantized, we might be able to use it in semi-conductor technology! (It's got to be faster than electricity, right?)
 
  • #18


By mouth
 
  • #19


DaveC426913 said:
This whole pressure wave thing is passe.

The modern model is that sound travels in discrete little bundles called mp3 players.

I Believe this theory was was introduced by Professor Jimi Hendrix in 8 track form circa 1967
 

1. What is sound travel and how does it work?

Sound travel refers to the movement of sound waves through a medium, such as air or water. It is the result of vibrations in an object that create a series of compressions and rarefactions, which travel through the medium and are perceived by our ears as sound. These vibrations are carried by molecules in the medium, which bump into each other and transfer the energy of the sound wave.

2. What factors affect the speed of sound?

The speed of sound is affected by the properties of the medium it is traveling through, such as density, temperature, and elasticity. In general, sound travels faster in denser mediums, such as solids, and slower in less dense mediums, such as gases. It also travels faster in warmer temperatures and slower in colder temperatures. The elasticity of the medium also plays a role, with more elastic mediums allowing sound to travel faster.

3. How does distance affect the intensity of sound?

The intensity of sound decreases as it travels further away from its source. This is because the energy of the sound wave is spread out over a larger area as it moves through the medium. The farther away you are from the source of the sound, the more spread out the sound waves will be, resulting in a decrease in intensity. This is known as the inverse square law.

4. Can sound travel in a vacuum?

No, sound cannot travel in a vacuum as there are no molecules present to carry the vibrations of the sound wave. In order for sound to travel, it needs a medium such as air, water, or a solid substance.

5. How does the frequency of sound waves affect pitch?

The frequency of a sound wave is directly related to its pitch. Higher frequencies correspond to higher pitches, and lower frequencies correspond to lower pitches. This is because the frequency of a sound wave is the number of cycles of compression and rarefaction that occur in one second, and our ears perceive these cycles as different pitches.

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