Sound waves with lower frequencies tend to travel longer distances primarily because of their longer wavelengths. Here is a deeper dive into why this is the case:
1. Wavelength and diffraction:
Lower frequency sound waves have longer wavelengths. When a wave encounters obstacles such as buildings, trees, or even variations in atmospheric conditions, a longer wavelength can bend or diffract around these obstacles more easily. This means that low-frequency sounds are less likely to be blocked or scattered, allowing them to travel further without being significantly disrupted.
2. Atmospheric absorption:
The medium through which sound travels - typically air - absorbs sound energy as it propagates. This absorption tends to increase with frequency; higher frequency waves, which oscillate much more rapidly, interact more intensely with air molecules, converting more of their energy into heat. Lower frequency waves, on the other hand, experience less energy loss per cycle due to these interactions. The lower the frequency, the less the absorption, and the further the sound can propagate before it becomes too weak.
3. Scattering and energy loss
Real world examples:
Animal communication: Elephants and whales, for instance, make extensive use of low-frequency sounds (even infrasound) to communicate over vast distances. Their calls can travel for kilometers, making them ideal for long-range communication.
Engineering and communication: In underwater communication and certain military applications, extremely low frequencies are exploited because these waves penetrate water or obstacles better than higher frequencies.
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