![This is a question](/images/board_posticon.gif)
Some mugs still think the MMR injection gives children autism (it doesn't), while others are of the belief that we're ruled by billionaire lizard people. Tell us about views outside the mainstream which people go glassy eyed if you bang on about them (Your grandad's a racist - no need to tell us, thanks)
Suggested by Frample Thromwibbler
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 12:06)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
As sound attenuates the higher than ambient pressure of the wave crest eventually collides with the lower than ambient pressure of the wave trough, cancelling the wave.
There is a measurable half life in ideal conditions but the remaining sound wave quickly becomes indistinguishable from the background of random molecular motion.
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 14:50, 2 replies)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
which is perilously close to "you can't prove a negative".
Thanks for the physics though, I know it's a silly theory but somehow the mere idea of sound carrying on comforts me, a bit like how religion works on other feeble-minded people perhaps.
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 15:03, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
it's just that I want to maintain my standing in the scientific community before unveiling my really big theory, the fools.
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 23:39, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
but those aren't the physics. How can the crest collide with the trough? The whole point of a wave is that they are going at the same speed. Different waves may move at different speeds in some media, but that's dispersion, which is quite different from dissipation.
It's much simpler than that: friction between air molecules mean that as the sound wave propagates, it continually loses energy to heat and reduces in amplitude.
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 15:30, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
to the coastline but when you look over the side of a ship at sea they're all going in different directions and colliding with each other at various angles.
Who straightens them up and at what distance from the beach does he do it?
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 15:41, closed)
![This is a QotW comment](/images/board_posticon.gif)
My mate Alan works the coast between Morecambe and Fleetwood. I've gone with him on his rounds a couple times. We were a fair distance out when he was straightening the waves, about 10 miles or so I'd reckon.
HTH
( , Thu 25 Apr 2013, 16:02, closed)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread