Why don't shooting stars make a noise?

In summary: It sounded more like a sonic boom. I immediately looked up to see if anyone else was seeing or hearing it and I couldn't see or hear anyone. I'm not sure if it was just me or if it was really loud, but it definitely sounded like thunder to me.
  • #1
shifty88
53
0
Pretty self explainable.

Why do they not create a sonic boom when they enter Earths atmosphere
 
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  • #2
How do you know they don't ?

I would suspect that they do, considering they are traveling at 20km/s or greater
many times the speed of sound :)

the absence of hearing a sonic boom is not proof of the absence of a boom.
It just means you are too far away from the object to hear it. The majority of the meteors
you see burning up in the atmosphere are doing so at 50 - 75km altitude.

Sound doesn't travel very far through the atmosphere. Even the massive booms of thunder
only travel ~ 15 km max before they die out

cheers
Dave
 
  • #3
interesting.
How do you know that they do?

Not saying i don't believe you, just curious.
 
  • #4
Some meteorites have indeed been observed with an accompanying sound.
 
  • #5
DaveC426913 said:
Some meteorites have indeed been observed with an accompanying sound.

Especially the ones that hit you.

shifty88 said:
interesting.
How do you know that they do?

Not saying i don't believe you, just curious.

A sonic boom creates sound that is no different from any other sound. If someone set off an explosive 15km away from you, there's a good chance you won't hear it unless it's a very powerful explosion (not to imply that a sonic boom is an explosion).
 
  • #6
There seems to be another mechanism by which meteors can "make" noise as the ionized gas goes through the magnetic field it releases radio waves which can cause conductive metals on the ground to vibrate.

Wikipedia said:
Any sound generated by a meteor in the upper atmosphere, such as a sonic boom, should not be heard until many seconds after the meteor disappeared. However, in certain instances, for example during the Leonid meteor shower of 2001, several people reported sounds described as "crackling", "swishing", or "hissing"[18] occurring at the same instant as a meteor flare. Similar sounds have also been reported during intense displays of Earth's auroras.[19][20][21][22]

Sound recordings made under controlled conditions in Mongolia in 1998 by a team led by Slaven Garaj, a physicist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at Lausanne, support the contention that the sounds are real.[23]

How these sounds could be generated, assuming they are in fact real, remains something of a mystery. It has been hypothesized by some scientists at NASA as that the turbulent ionized wake of a meteor interacts with the magnetic field of the Earth, generating pulses of radio waves. As the trail dissipates, megawatts of electromagnetic energy could be released, with a peak in the power spectrum at audio frequencies. Physical vibrations induced by the electromagnetic impulses would then be heard if they are powerful enough to make grasses, plants, eyeglass frames, and other conductive materials vibrate.[24][25][26][27] This proposed mechanism, although proven to be plausible by laboratory work, remains unsupported by corresponding measurements in the field.
 
  • #7
Although meteors must generate sounds they pass through the atmosphere at very high velocity, as others here have already explained, it’s no surprise that we normally don’t hear it. Sound does not propagate in air for great distances. Both spherical spreading and absorption diminish the sound intensity. For absorption the following variables affect the distance sound can travel: Air Pressure, Ambient Air Temperature, Percent Relative Humidity, and Sound Frequency.

Since thunder also generates sound, and that sound must propagate through our atmosphere to be heard, it may be useful to investigate the physics of thunder sound propagation. Here are two sources that describe this:

1. Thunder is seldom heard beyond 10 miles (16 km) under ideal conditions. The sound of distant thunder has a characteristic low-pitched rumbling sound. Pitch, the degree of highness or lowness of a sound, is due to strong absorption and scattering of high-frequency components of the original sound waves, while the rumbling results from the fact that sound waves are emitted from different locations along the lightning channel, which lie at varying distances from a person. The longer the lightning channels, the longer the sound of thunder. Humans hear frequencies of thunder between 20-120 Hertz (Hz). However, there is a small amount, less than 10%, that is inaudible to humans produced from lightning, called infrasonic. Special listening devices are required to record these inaudible sounds.
http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_info/thunder2.html

2. See the sections “Thunder sound propagation” at this site:
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Engineering_Acoustics/Thunder_acoustics

Finally, here are some real examples of witnesses hearing the sound of a meteorite:

3. "Sounds Associated with Witnessed Meteorite Falls"
http://www.meteorites.com.au/odds&ends/sounds.html
 
  • #8
Just thought I'd add my own eye witness account. One sunny day I was walking across an open field when I happened to look up at just the right time to see a bright meteor streak across the sky. The head was orange and the tail was blue. Before it disappeared it split into two meteors. Then about 30 to 60 seconds after it disappeared I heard a sound very similar to thunder. It did not sound so much like a sonic boom, just more like thunder.
 
  • #9
TurtleMeister said:
...I heard a sound very similar to thunder. It did not sound so much like a sonic boom, just more like thunder.

That would be right and would be the same for a supersonic aircraft at a distance from you

just the same with the thunder from a close compared to a more distant lightning strike.
the close one a sharp loud crack, the more distant one a lower freq and longer rumble

Dave
 
  • #10
BTW, most meteors that we see tend to burn up very very high in the atmosphere, near the edge of space. The air is very tenuous up there - enough to create a shock and cause the meteor to burn up, but it carries sound poorly. So, not at all like thunder.
 
  • #11
The language of the Jaru people of Australia contains a word, "goolunmurru", that describes the sound and vibration of sonic booms from meteors or shooting stars.
 
  • #12
I saw the Space Shuttle re-enter once. I heard the sonic boom. IIRC, the delay was several minutes.
 
  • #13
At 5 seconds a mile, a meteor sonic boom 50 miles above you (neglecting variation in SoS w/ altitude) is going to take 250 seconds to reach you. How many folks seeing that are going to realize they have to wait that long to have a chance to hear the thud?
 

1. Why don't shooting stars make a noise?

Shooting stars, also known as meteors, do not make a noise because they are traveling through the vacuum of space where there is no air for sound waves to travel through. Sound waves need a medium, such as air, to travel and be heard by our ears. Since space is mostly empty and devoid of air, there is no medium for the sound of a shooting star to travel through.

2. Can shooting stars make a noise if they are close enough to Earth?

No, even if a shooting star were to enter the Earth's atmosphere and get close to the surface, it still would not make a noise. The sound would only be heard if the meteor were large enough to create a sonic boom, which is rare. Most meteors burn up in the atmosphere and do not have enough mass to create a sonic boom.

3. Why do some people claim to have heard a noise when they saw a shooting star?

Some people may think they have heard a noise when they saw a shooting star, but this is most likely due to a phenomenon called the "exploding head syndrome." This is a type of auditory hallucination where people hear loud noises, such as a bang or a roar, when falling asleep or waking up. The visual stimulation of seeing a shooting star may trigger this auditory hallucination in some people.

4. Do other objects in space make a noise when they move?

No, other objects in space, such as planets, asteroids, and comets, do not make a noise when they move. This is because they are moving through the same vacuum of space where there is no medium for sound waves to travel through. However, some objects, like planets, may have magnetic fields that can produce radio waves that can be detected by instruments on Earth.

5. Are there any exceptions to shooting stars not making a noise?

Yes, there are some rare cases where a shooting star may make a noise. This is usually when a meteor is large enough to create a sonic boom as it enters the atmosphere. However, this is very rare and most shooting stars do not make a noise. Additionally, some meteors may make a hissing or crackling noise as they burn up in the atmosphere, but this is not a sound that can be heard by the human ear.

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