[GIPHY="no limit"]https://media3.giphy.com/media/KwkWZcMQdjwnS/giphy.gif[/GIPHY]wonder what is the lowest possible frequency we can produce
the Sumatran Rhinoceros has been shown to produce sounds with frequencies as low as 3 Hz which have similarities with the song of the humpback whale.[14] The roar of the tiger contains infrasound of 18 Hz and lower,[17
bigger star lower the frequency or some such relation?i know that solar winds interacting with the magnetosphere create ULF waves, which are in the .001hz range. but technically thats not something we create.
bigger star lower the frequency or some such relation?
yes there must be several factorsyou know, im not sure about the generation side of it, but I imagine that the mass of the object generation the sound certainly has something to do with it. I bet theres also natural "amplifiers" that route the sound based on magnetic fields and such.
thanks domon babamore appropriate to measure how intensely the wave (energy) perturbs matter i think.
Sound can certainly have great impact on matter at a physical level, but on the other hand, gamma radiation can literally tear apart atoms. Which is stronger? All depends on how you measure it i guess
Of the common waves, id say infrared might have the greatest "broad" impact on matter.
ya im definitely using homemade terms lolgooglefu (having the right search terms) comes into great play when researching scientific stuff. I certainly dont know all this off the top of my head, I might have a general idea, but finding the sources with the details in all from google.
prob makes it a rare form of energy universally (apologies if im talking out of my ass baba)deep space is not a medium for sound transmission, the gas density is too low.
i get what you're saying. Interstellar sound is certainly an extremely rare thing.prob makes it a rare form of energy universally (apologies if im talking out of my ass baba)
..could be as rare as a single phenomenon im sure that supernova 400 years ago was not heard, was it?i get what you're saying. Interstellar sound is certainly an extremely rare thing.
If astronomers here were to hear a sound in the human hearing range from outside our atmosphere, even if it was from the moon, that would be a remarkable phenomenon