Redbelly98 said:
The harmonics can go well past the range of hearing, but not to infinity. When half the wavelength equals the spacing between adjacent atoms, that is the highest frequency that can be produced.
Theseus said:
Are we talking atoms of "air"?
Yes (though I should have said molecules) -- or whatever material is transmitting the sound wave. Could also be the atoms in a guitar string. It's a little more complicated, since there is randomness in the spacing between atoms, but that is the general idea.
Any idea what the frequency would be at that level?
For a ballpark figure (won't be exact), we can use the relation taught in introductory physics,
speed of sound = frequency × wavelength
For air:
The speed of sound is 340 m/s.
[EDIT: see note below] [STRIKE]Atoms are roughly 3 nm apart on average, so the wavelength is twice that spacing or 6×10-9 m
Plug the numbers for speed of sound and wavelength into the equation, and see what frequency you get.[/STRIKE]
Disclaimer: I imagine the actual frequency limit quite less than this, because the spacing between molecules is random, the air will dissipate/absorb sound energy, or reasons I'm not even aware of -- I am no accoustics expert, and am just seeing how far introductory physics goes toward getting an answer here.
EDIT:
After some more google searching, I'm find that for a gas we use the mean free path of the molecules, i.e. the average distance a molecule travels before colliding with another molecule, which is (apparently) 70 nm. So a wavelength of 70×10
-9 m, and 340 m/s for the speed of sound, will give a rough idea of the maximum frequency for "sound" in air.