Bearcastle Blog » Singing Sand Dunes

Singing Sand Dunes

From Physics News Update,* I found this item (given entire below) of interest, no doubt because it touches on several sub-disciplines of physics that used to attract my research interest.

DUNE TUNES. For centuries, world travelers have known of sand dunes that issue loud sounds, sometimes of great tonal quality. In the 12th century Marco Polo heard singing sand in China and Charles Darwin described the clear sounds coming from a sand deposit up against a mountain in Chile. Now, a team of scientists has disproved the long held belief that the sound comes from vibrations of the dune as a whole and proven, through field studies and through controlled experiments in a lab, that the sounds come from the synchronized motions of the grains in avalanches of a certain size. Small avalanches don’t produce any detectable sound, while large avalanches produce sound at lots of frequencies (leading to cacophonous noise). But sand slides of just the right size and velocity result in sounds of a pure frequency, with just enough overtones to give the sound “color,” as if the dunes were musical instruments. In this case, however, the uning isn’t produced by any outside influence but by critically self-organizing tendencies of the dune itself. The researchers thus rule out various “musical” explanations. For example, the dune sound does not come from the stick-slip motion of blocks of sand across the body of the dune (much as violin sounds are made by the somewhat-periodic stick-slip motion of a bow across a string attached to the body of the violin). Nor does the dune song arise from a resonance effect (much as resonating air inside a flute produces a pure tone) since it is observed that the dune sound level can be recorded at many locations around the dune. Instead, the sand sound comes from the synchronized, free sliding motion of dry larger-grained sand producing lower frequency sound. The scientists—from the University of Paris (France), Harvard (US), the CNRS lab in Paris, and the Universite Ibn Zohr (Morocco)—have set up a website (http://www.lps.ens.fr/~douady/SongofDunesIndex.html) where one can listen to sounds from different dunes in China, Oman, Morocco, and Chile. (Douady et al., Physical Review Letters, upcoming article; contact Stephane Douady at douady@lps.ens.fr)

———-
* The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News, Number 785 July 17, 2006, by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and Davide Castelvecchi. http://www.aip.org/pnu

Posted on July 17, 2006 at 13.58 by jns · Permalink
In: All, It's Only Rocket Science

One Response

Subscribe to comments via RSS

  1. Written by S.W. Anderson
    on Monday, 17 July 2006 at 23.00
    Permalink

    Interesting though their work is, these scientists obviously are unaware of the nifty '50s rock group, Sandy and the Four Dunes, whose doo-wop ballads regularly made the top-100 charts.

    Seriously, I can honestly say I learned something today. I also think it's reassuring now and then to hear about discoveries or research not related to some commercial venture. Just to figure out something somebody had always wondered about, in other words.

Subscribe to comments via RSS

Leave a Reply

To thwart spam, comments by new people are held for moderation; give me a bit of time and your comment will show up.

I welcome comments -- even dissent -- but I will delete without notice irrelevant, rude, psychotic, or incomprehensible comments, particularly those that I deem homophobic, unless they are amusing. The same goes for commercial comments and trackbacks. Sorry, but it's my blog and my decisions are final.