How Do Different Sounds and Heat Relate to Object Interaction and Air Movement?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gecko
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Sound
AI Thread Summary
Different sounds occur when objects interact due to the vibrations of their atomic structures, despite the repulsion of electrons preventing direct contact. Sound waves are longitudinal waves that propagate through air by creating pressure differences, which is distinct from the chaotic movement of air during windy conditions. Wind does not significantly alter sound because sound travels much faster than wind, allowing it to pass through without much distortion. Heat is generated by the vibrations of atoms, and the relatively slow speed of wind does not transfer substantial heat energy, as its cooling effects on the skin outweigh any heating. Overall, sound and heat are intricately linked to atomic movement and vibrations, rather than just the movement of air.
Gecko
Messages
63
Reaction score
0
how come different sounds are made when you hit different objects together, when in reality, the two objects aren't even touching (due to the repulsion of the electrons that make up the objects). and what is a sound wave? it can't just be the movement of air because then we would here different sounds all the time when it was windy, right?

also, is heat created due to the movement of atoms, or the vibrations of atoms? if its just movement, wouldn't windy days be hotter than they are?

these are probably really stupid questions, but i was just curious.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Gecko said:
how come different sounds are made when you hit different objects together, when in reality, the two objects aren't even touching (due to the repulsion of the electrons that make up the objects). and what is a sound wave? it can't just be the movement of air because then we would here different sounds all the time when it was windy, right?

also, is heat created due to the movement of atoms, or the vibrations of atoms? if its just movement, wouldn't windy days be hotter than they are?

these are probably really stupid questions, but i was just curious.

Well the fields 'touch', this is enough to let the objects and by this the air vibrate.

Both sound and heat are the vibration of atoms. Sound propagtes by means of a longitudinal (in air) wave. This means the air contracts yielding a locally larger pressure, than expands, in a forward propagating manner. So the wind you mention is not in the organised form, and with large pressure differences, we experience from sound.

If you do the calulations you will find the speed of these vibrations associated with thermal energy much faster than any storm.
 
Although * technically * the objects arent touching, they are as good as touching for all purposes. The space between one object and the other when we see it as 'touching' is infinitesmally small. In any case, the force from one object is still transferred to the other. IE, bang a hammer on some wood, even though the wood and hammer molocules never actually touch, the hammer still 'pushes' the wood, because the magnetic fields of the atoms are pushing on each other.

You may be right, wind may alter sound to a degree, but really, sound moves much much faster than wind, so the sound should zoom right through a windstream before it changes much, making it harder for wind to alter sound very much.

I would say that wind does transfer some heat energy to you, but very little, and the winds cooling effects on the skin greatly outweight the heating effects. As to why wind doesn't transfer alot of heat energy, I would have to guess that due to the relativly slow speed of wind (from 1-20 mph), there simply isn't enough kinetic energy in this to make that big of a difference, due to the speed and also mabye the low density of air. Someone should be able to answer this one better.
 
Last edited:
Gecko said:
how come different sounds are made when you hit different objects together, when in reality, the two objects aren't even touching (due to the repulsion of the electrons that make up the objects). and what is a sound wave? it can't just be the movement of air because then we would here different sounds all the time when it was windy, right?

also, is heat created due to the movement of atoms, or the vibrations of atoms? if its just movement, wouldn't windy days be hotter than they are?

these are probably really stupid questions, but i was just curious.

If that is not touching, nothing is, so you might as well call it "touching". Specifying what Jake said, repulsion is not due to magnetic fields or surface electrons, it is due to the object's entire electric field framework of both nuclei and electrons.

The difference between a sound wave and wind is that wind is not a wave, or rather, it is an extremely low-frequency wave. If wind went left and right really quickly, it would make your ear drum shake, and you would have noise.

In a wind, all atoms travel in the same general direction. In a hot gas, they don't. That is much of the difference.
 
I am a front of house live sound engineer. Wind definitely affects me on a daily basis when working outdoor jobs. It gets really bad in larger venues (20,000 seaters or more). You can hear the high end (5kHz and up) literally comb filtering as it makes it's way through the atmosphere.
 
The rope is tied into the person (the load of 200 pounds) and the rope goes up from the person to a fixed pulley and back down to his hands. He hauls the rope to suspend himself in the air. What is the mechanical advantage of the system? The person will indeed only have to lift half of his body weight (roughly 100 pounds) because he now lessened the load by that same amount. This APPEARS to be a 2:1 because he can hold himself with half the force, but my question is: is that mechanical...
Hello everyone, Consider the problem in which a car is told to travel at 30 km/h for L kilometers and then at 60 km/h for another L kilometers. Next, you are asked to determine the average speed. My question is: although we know that the average speed in this case is the harmonic mean of the two speeds, is it also possible to state that the average speed over this 2L-kilometer stretch can be obtained as a weighted average of the two speeds? Best regards, DaTario
Some physics textbook writer told me that Newton's first law applies only on bodies that feel no interactions at all. He said that if a body is on rest or moves in constant velocity, there is no external force acting on it. But I have heard another form of the law that says the net force acting on a body must be zero. This means there is interactions involved after all. So which one is correct?
Back
Top