Police Car Sound Intensity Change

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the change in sound intensity of a police siren as the distance from the source decreases from 220 meters to 55 meters. The initial sound intensity is given as 75 dB at 220 meters, and participants explore the relationship between intensity and distance using the formula for sound intensity. They highlight the need to convert decibels into watts per square meter, noting that the dB scale is logarithmic. The conversation includes attempts to rearrange equations for intensity and acknowledges the complexities involved in the calculations. Ultimately, the goal is to determine how many decibels higher the sound intensity will be at the closer distance.
JumpinJohny
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Homework Statement


A police siren produces a sound whose frequency range from 635Hz to 912Hz. When the police car is 220 meters from from the scene of an accident, the sirens blare at 75dB. How many decibels higher will the sound intensity be when the police car is 55m away?


Homework Equations



The sound intensity = A^2*f^2, but I'm not sure if I am missing something there.

The Attempt at a Solution


If that equation is right, then I'd use ((220^2)(f^2))-((55^2)(f^2)); I'm stuck after that :frown:
 
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well I am not 100% sure on how to solve this either, but we know the sound is expanding as a shell. As that shell expands it will become less and less intense. and we set up an equation where Intensity2/intensity1=radius1^2/radius2^2 based the equation [4(pi)r^2]^-1=I

also make sure to convert from dB into W/m^2
 
Do you know what that conversion is?
 
I know dB is a logarythmic, rather than a linear scale, so be carefull of that. I'm not sure if it's base 2 log or something else.
 
10dbxlog(base10)([intensity in W/m^2]/[1.0E^-12w/M^2]=Intensity in Db

so somebody needs to rearrange that but I can't do all the work.., ok maybe I will.

I/10=log(I/1.0E^-12)
e^(I/10)=I/1.0E^-12
1.0E-12e^(I/10)=Intensity in W/m^2
 
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