tee
Just wondering...
Is there a limit to how loud a sound can be?
Is there a limit to how loud a sound can be?
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The discussion revolves around the question of whether there is a limit to how loud a sound can be, exploring various theoretical and conceptual aspects of sound, loudness, and the physical properties of media through which sound travels.
Participants express multiple competing views on the limits of loudness, with no consensus reached. Various factors such as medium properties, auditory perception, and definitions of sound are debated.
Limitations include the dependence on definitions of sound and loudness, the unresolved nature of mathematical relationships between wave properties, and the ambiguity surrounding the transition from sound to other forms of energy like heat.
Originally posted by anilrapire
^ I think all of that stuff is more succinctly encapsulated in that person's speed of sound explanation.
I'd only avoid to call that sound wave, because it is unable to travel in air separately, without continuous addition of energy from meteor. Immense pressure in front of meteor is unable to travel by itself. More like explosion rather than sound.Originally posted by Chi Meson
As for is it "sound," well the immense pressure in front of the meteor is followed by a rarefied zone behind it, ergo "pressure amplitude." Voila: a sound so loud you blow up!