bothnicum
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What are the possible effects of pressure changes of the surrounding gas during crystallization. Can such changes be detected on the resulting crystal.
May I kindly ask whether you consider that there is a principal fault in my phrasing or just that the effects are beyond the limits of known methods and tools.forget it
An interesting and fashinating thought ... especially as a mental puzzle, practicality is a different matter don't necessarily need to bother ourselves with. Crystallization and crystal growth could store audible signals, the first problems or issues coming to mind are the required pressures (which are somewhat high I'd say, since essentially would have to induce a stress state in the solidifying material) and then the capacity of storing information, the sort of resolution one could come up with for example after viewing the results (as solidified crystals) or the resulting crystal growth (like would the information about the signal be for example stored in a single crystal, it's size for one - how pressure affects grain growth if everything else is constant is somewhat straightforward [writing geometry here is likely asking a bit too much, but one could for example simulate resulting geometrical effects in crystal growth]) (and whether the signals would be traceable from multiple other parameters of the diffusion, thermal, mechanical, kinetic,...). I'm left wondering for the 'best' material to capture information in this respect, since it would be easiest to store the information near liquid state, and then make sure it's readable and not drowned by what goes on after during solidification (essentially affecting the nucleation in the necessary magnitude).bothnicum said:I am conducting a mental exercise on the possibility of finding mechanism that could store audible signals in a natural way without human technology. We could call it audio archaeology.
We need some progressive change process that is somehow affected by the surrounding sound waves. Let's take an analogy. The yearly growth rings in a tree are affected by the surrounding climate. The climate "waves" can be read by a dendrologist. Unfortunately the frequency is too low to be heard.
The process must be faster. Fire could be a candidate. If the changes of air pressure affects the burning process, the sound waves could be readable from the ashes. However fire is not smooth. The recording gets blurred.
But how about crystallization. To my understanding it progressing in steady speed in one place at a time and the result is stable and easily readable.
I appreciate your help in bringing light to this mental puzzle that bothers me a lot.