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The Sounds of Mars |
Jun 9 2006, 07:56 PM
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2454 Joined: 8-July 05 From: NGC 5907 Member No.: 430 |
ON MARS, NO ONE COULD HEAR A LAWN MOWER'S SOUND farther than a
couple of hundred feet, compared to the several miles it can travel on Earth, according to a new computer simulation of sound propagation on our next-door planetary neighbor. In general, what do things sound like on Mars? At this week's meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in Providence, Amanda Hanford (ald227@psu.edu) and Lyle Long of Penn State presented detailed computer calculations that simulate how sound travels through the Martian atmosphere, which is much thinner than Earth's (exerting only 0.7% of the pressure of our atmosphere on the surface) and has a very different composition (containing 95.3% carbon dioxide, compared to about 0.33% on our planet). The loss of 1999's Mars Polar Lander, which was to record sounds directly on the planet, has compelled researchers to find other means to study how sound travels there. To determine the behavior of sound on Mars, the researchers analyzed how gas molecules move and collide in its atmosphere. The researchers took into account the gas molecules' mean free path, the average distance a molecule travels before it collides with a neighbor (6 microns, compared to 50 nm on Earth). They also considered the different ways in which gas molecules could exchange energy when colliding with each other. In their computational approach, known as direct simulation Monte Carlo, collisions occurred randomly, though at a statistically accurate rate. Accounting for the different combinations of molecule species that could collide along with the many different ways in which they could lose or gain energy required a huge amount of computation---over 60 hours---even for simulating a small patch of atmosphere for every sound frequency they considered, using a 32 processor "Beowulf" computer cluster that was one of the most powerful computers in the world. With their approach, the researchers could determine all physical properties of interest in the propagation of sound on Mars. The researchers' results show that the absorption of sound on Mars is 100 times greater than it is on Earth, because of the differences in molecular composition and lower atmospheric pressure. Owing to computational considerations (they could only analyze collisions over a relatively small region of space), the researchers only simulated the propagation of lower-wavelength sounds (with frequencies in the ultrasound regime) but extrapolated the results down to audible frequencies. Meeting paper 2aPA3; more information at: http://www.acoustics.org/press/151st/Hanford.html *********** PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE is a digest of physics news items arising from physics meetings, physics journals, newspapers and magazines, and other news sources. It is provided free of charge as a way of broadly disseminating information about physics and physicists. For that reason, you are free to post it, if you like, where others can read it, providing only that you credit AIP. Physics News Update appears approximately once a week. PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News Number 780 June 9, 2006 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and Davide Castelvecchi http://www.aip.org/pnu -------------------- "After having some business dealings with men, I am occasionally chagrined,
and feel as if I had done some wrong, and it is hard to forget the ugly circumstance. I see that such intercourse long continued would make one thoroughly prosaic, hard, and coarse. But the longest intercourse with Nature, though in her rudest moods, does not thus harden and make coarse. A hard, sensible man whom we liken to a rock is indeed much harder than a rock. From hard, coarse, insensible men with whom I have no sympathy, I go to commune with the rocks, whose hearts are comparatively soft." - Henry David Thoreau, November 15, 1853 |
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| Guest_Richard Trigaux_* |
Jun 9 2006, 08:54 PM
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Guests |
ON MARS, NO ONE COULD HEAR A LAWN MOWER'S SOUND farther than a couple of hundred feet, compared to the several miles it can travel on Earth So, Mars is the better place to set monasteries and the like. Recording sounds on other planets would yeld little science data, but it would have an overwhelming impact on people here on Earth, perhaps more than images. For instance when a dust devil passed right on Spirit, there was very probably some sound to record. A little known fact on Earth is that sounds can travel hundred of kilometres, thanks to a change of the propagation speed into the stratosphere, which acts a bit like a waveguide. It is difficult to extrapolate to mars, but eventually such a phenomenon could occur here, or on any other planet. From here the interest to have a sound recording, which would catch wind, meteorites, earthquakes, etc. (In infrasound, the noise of large meteorites can travel to thousand kilometres, on earth). Another property is that the timbre of sounds depends on the chemical composition of air. More precisely, of the number of atoms the molecules have. When people speak in helium (1 atom), their voice gets a "donald duck" timbre, compared to their normal timbre in air (2 atoms). In C02 (3 atoms), there would be a reverse effect (but don't try to speak in CO2!!) giving eventually a special Mars sound. On Venus also, but here sounds could eventually travel very far, due to high density, low attenuation, and eventually reflections into the upper atmosphere. Any probe on Venus should have a microphone, and eventually several probes with each a microphone could allow to spot noisy events (thunder, volcanoes...) |
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ljk4-1 The Sounds of Mars Jun 9 2006, 07:56 PM
DonPMitchell QUOTE (Richard Trigaux @ Jun 9 2006, 01:5... Jun 9 2006, 09:19 PM
Richard Trigaux sound spreading in 1/R instead of 1/R2 is what hap... Jun 9 2006, 09:28 PM
tasp IIRC, during a Martian year, there are sizable var... Jun 10 2006, 02:58 PM![]() ![]() |
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