This article was written by Mike Bannon
Close your eyes for a moment and pretend you are picnicking, during the mid-afternoon, with family and friends in Central Park. About a two football fields away you can see a softball game. You can see the men and women cheering as ballplayers smack the ball and race around the bases. You see a player slide into home plate and you watch the umpire signal him out. You can see all this action, but you cannot hear it.
Later that night as the temperature cools and other softball teams are playing under the lights you can see and hear everything clearly. Why is this so? Could it be, during the day, you were situated in an acoustic shadow?
During the day the sun heats up the earth’s surface, warming the air close to the ground. Sound travels faster in warmer air. So the sound travels faster in the air close to the ground. The reverse happens at night. At night the ground cools quickly. The higher air is warmer than the air close to the ground. During the day the sound travels faster near the ground. This causes the sound wave to refract upwards. At night the opposite happens. The sound further from the ground travels faster at night causing the sound wave to refract back towards the earth.
In the 1800s Osborne Reynolds performed the first sound wave refraction recorded test. He placed a ringing bell, one foot above the ground, and crawled twenty yards. He had to lift his head in order to hear the ringing sound. He then crawled seventy yards and had to stand before he could hear the ringing sound.
In 2001 Charles D. Ross published a book called Civil War Acoustic Shadows. In this article we are going to explore the phenomenon of sound wave refraction and how it relates to the sounds of war the formation of acoustic shadows.
In the early 20th century, with the use of hot air balloons, scientists started to learn more about our atmosphere and its different layers. In 1923 atmospheric temperature changes were documented while studying meteors. In 1924 Erwin Schrodinger, a Nobel-Prize winning Austrian Physicist, suggested that “low-frequency sounds would be absorbed less in the atmosphere and would therefore be refracted back to earth more strongly than high frequency sounds”.
The layers that house our ozone tend to be warmer due to the captured radiation from the sun. When the sound wave hits this warmer layer, it’s refracted back towards the earth.
Wind also plays an important role in the refraction of sound waves and ultimately on the distance they travel. Wind traveling directly into an oncoming sound wave will make it refract upward more sharply. Wind traveling in the same direction as a sound wave will make the sound wave refraction more gradual. In the upper atmosphere a strong wind traveling in the direction of the wave will push the wave further and faster.
During the first World War, on the 28th of September 1914, German artillery began shelling the Belgian city of Antwerp and the fortifications that protected the city. The acoustic shadow zone started approximately thirty miles from the artillery and ended at about sixty miles away. After the sixty-mile mark, the German artillery bombardment was heard. The people within the thirty to sixty mile radius of the artillery could not hear it.
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At Gettysburg July 2nd 1863 General Lee issues a command for Lieutenant General James Longstreet to attack the round tops – the south end of cemetery ridge. The hill top was virtually undefended. Lee hoped to get his cannons to the round tops so the confederates could bombard the union troops with cannon fire. Upon hearing Longstreet’s attack, Lieutenant General Richard Ewell was to attack from the left. He was to order his men to attack as soon as he heard Longstreet’s barrage of cannon fire. He never heard Longstreet’s cannons. Ewell and his army found themselves situated in an acoustic shadow. Meanwhile, the Union’s Major General George Meade moved men from his right to his left to stop Longstreet’s advance.
In 1865 Lee had his army situated outside the city of Petersburg Virginia. Lee correctly guessed that Grant would look to attack his right flank. Lee sent General George Picket with the army of northern Virginia, five thousand confederate soldiers, down to Five Forks to dig in and set up dirt and wood defenses. Lee understood the need to hold this area in order to protect his southern supply railroad open.
Grant knew this strategic importance and sent his Union Major General Phillip Sheridan to attack Lee’s left flank at the Five Forks. On the morning of the attack, confederate Major General Fitzhugh Lee invited Picket along with Major General Thomas Rosser to a fish bake two miles away from Picket’s front line. Picket neglected to tell him men that he was leaving. Historians speculate that he did not tell him men, who were probably hungry and malnourished, because he felt guilty.
The confederates suffered a major defeat — one that would accelerate the coming end of the civil war. Picket and his commanders were caught in an acoustic shadow. That afternoon while the generals thought they were enjoying a quiet uneventful relaxing fish bake, their world was collapsing.
The speed of sound at 0 degrees Celsius is 331 m/s. For each 1 degree Celsius added the speed of sound increases. Here is the formula for calculating the increase in speed:
C = (331 + 0.6T)m/s
C = the new speed of sound
T = the air temperature in degrees Celsius
To calculate the speed of sound in air at 30 degrees:
C = (331 + 0.6 × 30) = 349 m/s
At 30 degrees Celsius, the speed of sound is 349 m/s.
When environmental engineers look to minimize industrial noise to surrounding communities they must consider the concept of sound wave refraction and its acoustic shadow effect. Industrial noise, in areas immediately surrounding the factories, will be greater at night than during the day.
Take a look at the oil refinery in the photo below. The surrounding community will hear little of the sounds emitted from the stacks high above the refinery during the day. The sound waves from these sources will ultimate refract upward. Communities located many kilometers away will here this noise. However, during the night is a different story. These waves will be refracted right onto the community.
Let’s say a stack is emitting sound wave 20 meters above the ground. Engineers need to calculate the angle of refraction in order to determine how to best combat this phenomena and ultimately reduce decibel levels to surrounding community. In a follow up article, "Proposed Math for Refracting Sound Waves," we will propose new math used to calculate the and angle of refracting (bending) of sound waves. Later this year, we also intend to conduct an experiment similar to the one performed by Osborne Reynolds in the 1800's. Look for this article sometime in September, 2015.