Speed of Shockwaves: Faster than Sound?

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Shock waves can indeed move faster than the speed of sound, but they typically reduce to that speed depending on the medium they travel through. The discussion highlights that the speed of shock waves is influenced by factors such as the type of material, its density, and temperature. A specific example discussed is the shock wave generated by an explosion, like that of dynamite. The conversation references a Wikipedia page that provides detailed information on shock waves and their behavior. Overall, the consensus is that while shock waves can exceed sound speed, they eventually conform to it based on environmental conditions.
diegzumillo
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To put it simply, can a shock wave move faster than the speed of sound?

A lot of people seem to think so, and it might even be, but based on the wrong arguments. 'Sonic boom is caused when an object is traveling faster than the speed of sound' so the argument starts. OK, that is clearly the wrong start of an argument but the question is still a good one.

I never studied fluid physics before, but my intuition suggests shock waves can move faster than the speed of sound but it soon reduces to speed of sound.

To make the problem a little more specific, let's consider a stationary dynamite exploding.
 
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Thanks for the link, it does answer the question :D I was looking at the shock wave page only.
 
so what SPECIFICALLY is your question ?

this one ?
To put it simply, can a shock wave move faster than the speed of sound?

yes

I never studied fluid physics before, but my intuition suggests shock waves can move faster than the speed of sound but it soon reduces to speed of sound.

maybe you should ;)

but it soon reduces to speed of sound.

That tells me nothing specific or useable

How quickly and how much it will slow will depend on what the shock wave is traveling through
type of material, its density, temperature to name 3 variables
To make the problem a little more specific, let's consider a stationary dynamite exploding.

That link I gave you gives important information on what kinds of explosives or other factors will or will not create a blast wave/shock wave as does the wiki on shock waves ...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_waveDave
 
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To quote myself
To put it simply, can a shock wave move faster than the speed of sound?
And the answer is 'yes'.
 
diegzumillo said:
To quote myself

And the answer is 'yes'.
and your point is ?

The wiki link told you that ;)
 
I know. I'm under the impression that you misread my previous post. I said "thanks for the link. it does answer the question". And that was it.
 
LOL DOH

I humbly apologise ... I need new glasses ( wait a minute they are relatively new ...maybe new eyes)

Sorry buddy :)

Dave
 
Haha That's ok! =)
 
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