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Sound Waves
Can a sound wave kill you?
In
"The Calculus Affair," one of the volumes in Hergé's classic Tintin
comic book series, the brilliant Professor Calculus invents a sonic device so
destructive he's kidnapped by a hostile government that intends to coerce him
into building acoustic weaponry.
The
malevolent military strategists behind the kidnapping are plotting to destroy
whole cities with intense blasts of sound.
Luckily,
of course, Calculus's good friends, the adventurous reporter Tintin and his
sidekick Captain Haddock, rescue the professor and foil the evil plot in the
nick of time.
But
is there any science behind this storyline? Can sound really kill?
And
if so, how?
Sound
is made by waves of pressure moving through a medium, like air.
Those
waves can also move through solids and liquids, which means they can move
through bodies, too. Theoretically, if you can build up enough pressure, you
can do some damage.
The
two key measurements when it comes to sound are decibels (dB) and hertz
(Hz).
A
decibel is a unit of sound intensity, while hertz refers to the frequency at
which the sound waves are moving.
Normal
conversation occurs between 50 and 65 dB.
A
lawnmower runs around 85 to 90 dB, while a jackhammer ratchets the noise
up to 110 dB, and a nearby jet engine gets you up into the 140 dB range [source: NIH].
Humans
can only hear sound waves between 20 and 20,000 Hz, but sound waves can still
affect us below that threshold.
If
you sit in front of a subwoofer with the frequency at 19 Hz, even with the
volume turned up to 100 dB, you won't hear anything - but you'll feel the
vibrations.
In
fact, at 19 Hz, your eyes start to go all wonky because that happens to be the
resonant frequency of the human eyeball.
If
you're exposed to 177 dB sound waves at 0.5 to 8 Hz, it can start messing with
your lungs, making your breathing erratic and literally shaking your bones
around.
Short-term
exposure can damage your joints, but the effects of chronic exposure can
include nausea and visual impairment [source: Horowitz].
The
European Space Agency (ESA) claims that if you somehow got accidentally locked
inside their Large European Acoustic Facility (LEAF) for testing the acoustic
resiliency of their satellites, you wouldn't survive the sonic onslaught.
A
key factor here is that you'd be in an enclosed space. Outside, sound waves
disperse and dissipate too quickly to reach lethal levels.
That
hasn't stopped researchers from investigating the use of sound as a weapon.
It's
been calculated, for instance, that it would require 240 dB to make a human
head explode.
That's
a whole lot of decibels. It would be next to impossible to generate this level
of noise.
Even
when the ESA's LEAF cranks its sound up to peak intensity, it's only putting
out around 154 dB [source: ESA].
But
for non-lethal purposes, sound weaponry can really come in handy.
Say,
for instance, you want to dissuade a boatload of Somalian pirates from joining
your cruise.
Try
turning on your trusty $30,000 long-range acoustic device (LRAD) and hammering
them with a beam of 150 dB of bone-jarring noise, which can cause permanent
hearing loss for its targets even at distances of 1,000 feet (300 meters) [source: Blenford].
Oisin Curran
Oisin Curran
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Oisin Curran is a freelance writer, editor and researcher, as well as regular contributor to HowStuffWorks. He writes on subjects ranging from the Antikythera Mechanism and the Fermi Paradox to Tardigrades and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Oisin also is the author of two novels, including his debut novel, Mopus.
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