Can Sound Waves Help Us Understand the Clearing of Saltwater Solutions?

  • Thread starter Thread starter gdaigle
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Physics
AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores the relationship between sound waves and the clearing of saltwater solutions. When salt is added to warm water and stirred, the pitch of the sound produced changes as the solution transitions from cloudy to clear. This phenomenon is attributed to the solid salt crystals affecting the sound frequency. In contrast, stirring plain warm water without salt results in minimal pitch change, indicating that the presence of solids influences sound wave behavior. The conversation highlights how different materials can conduct sound at varying frequencies.
gdaigle
Messages
7
Reaction score
0
I have a cold and need to gargle. I put a tsp of table salt into a waterglass, add warm water and stir. I immediate hear the ting-tang pitch of the spoon-hitting-glass slowly lowering as I stir. The solution is now cloudy. As I continue to stir the pitch now rises back to its beginning point as the solution begins to clear.

Why?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I should add ... I then tried the same (adding warm water, stirring) but without adding the table salt. There was no (or little) pitch change.
 
Well, obviously it's the solid salt crystals changing the pitch. As you know, sound travels faster through solids than it does through water (well it usually does). I guess different materials also conduct (is that the right word?) different frequencies in different ways.
 
Thread 'Confusion regarding a chemical kinetics problem'
TL;DR Summary: cannot find out error in solution proposed. [![question with rate laws][1]][1] Now the rate law for the reaction (i.e reaction rate) can be written as: $$ R= k[N_2O_5] $$ my main question is, WHAT is this reaction equal to? what I mean here is, whether $$k[N_2O_5]= -d[N_2O_5]/dt$$ or is it $$k[N_2O_5]= -1/2 \frac{d}{dt} [N_2O_5] $$ ? The latter seems to be more apt, as the reaction rate must be -1/2 (disappearance rate of N2O5), which adheres to the stoichiometry of the...

Similar threads

Back
Top