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by sillysaurus3
4274 days ago
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Nah, imagine a point on the earth. Now trace rays from that point in every possible direction. All of those rays will eventually lead to space or to the ground, and none will reach the other side of the Earth. Since molecules are physically further apart the higher you go in the atmosphere, it seems unlikely that the energy would be redirected at the edges, only dispersed. That must mean the wave is literally following wherever the atmosphere is thickest rather than simply being reflected. |
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[As a physics prof, I probably ought to be doing some sort of calculation to justify that, but I don't have the time. I'm sure it's been analyzed formally somewhere already. Just off the cuff, though, the speed of sound is lower at low temperature, so refraction of a sound wave in the upper atmosphere will tend to bend it outward, away from the Earth. I'm thus imagining that loud sounds may tend to locally push the atmosphere out from the planet a little bit, and I expect that coming back to equilibrium will be a lossy process that doesn't preserve the shape of the wave.]