- #1
Vorde
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I'm going to preface this by saying I know absolutely nothing about biology/medicine/anatomy, I'm a hopeful future physicist and when I ask my question all of you will probably scoff "stupid math nerd" and laugh...but here I go.
Every once in a while my ear rings. It only lasts for a few seconds, and It doesn't happen even close to enough for me to consider I have a problem (I think it's called tinnitus or something), too infrequent for me to even be able to guess how often it happens.
Anyway, I was trying to figure out why it happens, and I guessed that it's when the movement in the air just happens to cross over the eardrums resonance frequency and it keeps going until you hear a ring, is this feasible or correct?
Every once in a while my ear rings. It only lasts for a few seconds, and It doesn't happen even close to enough for me to consider I have a problem (I think it's called tinnitus or something), too infrequent for me to even be able to guess how often it happens.
Anyway, I was trying to figure out why it happens, and I guessed that it's when the movement in the air just happens to cross over the eardrums resonance frequency and it keeps going until you hear a ring, is this feasible or correct?