Can a Sound Mill Harness the Power of Sound Waves?

AI Thread Summary
Creating a sound mill that harnesses sound waves for mechanical work is theoretically possible, as sound consists of pressure waves. However, practical implementation would likely lead to deafness due to the high sound levels required to generate sufficient movement. Suggestions include using sound funnels similar to those in early recording devices to maximize effects, but concerns about safety persist. An alternative project idea is to explore a light mill, which converts solar energy into mechanical energy, offering a more feasible and safer experiment. Ultimately, the sound mill concept may be too challenging to execute effectively.
Amroth
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*please move if in wrong forum*

Im taking the IB at a school in New York and every 11th grader has to do a project called Einstein on the Beach. It involves creating your own project and doing it on the beach that the school will travel to on a day trip. I am trying to come up with a good project and I was wondering. Is it possible to create some sort of 'sound mill'? Sort of like a water mill, just that it reacts to sound waves? I was thinking maybe it would work if one could polarize them, but then i realized that they are longitudinal, not transverse. Is there possibilities in this project?

Thanks,
-Lars
 
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Since sound consists of pressure waves, it can certainly be harnessed to do work. That, after all, is what a microphone does. If you specifically mean to have some kind of vanes or paddles that turn because of it, I think that you and all of your classmates would be deafened long before the sound reached a high enough level to move anything like that. You can maximize whatever effect you do get by funnelling the sound as with the 'horn' on the original mechanical recording devices.
 
So basically there's no way i could arrange this without ending up deaf and with bleeding ears..? Couldn't there be some way to isolate the sounds waves?
 
You could take a boombox and an automatic wristwatch that has stopped, place the watch over the speakers and rock out till the watch starts?
 
Speaking of mills

Since you'll be on the beach anyway.. How about an experiment with a light mill ? :rolleyes: (http://www.globalwarmingsolutions.co.uk/crooks_radiometer_and_otheoscope.htm )

I've always been fascinated putting one of these in sunshine and watching the paddle spin at full tilt. Hmmmm I wonder if we can measure the efficiency of energy conversion, from solar to mechanical, for one of these.
 
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So how does it work? Wikipedia doesn't say anything about it.
 
Mk said:
So how does it work? Wikipedia doesn't say anything about it.
If you're referring to Crooke's Radiometer I mentioned, look at explanations 3 and 4 at the following link http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/C/Cr/Crookes_radiometer.htm
 
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Wow, the light mill sounds very interesting. Maybe i should try something like that, because it does not seem like the sound mill will be that easy to make work...
 
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