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by jonsen
4280 days ago
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It is enough to think about the part of the sound wave, a ring, that travels horizontally to see that it bends with the curvature of the earth. The front of the wave will at every point "shoot" some of the energy horizontally forward, and horizontal is at every point tangential to the earth surface.
What happens to the sound energy going upwards, well, energy can't disappear. And certainly not into the nothing between the air molecules in thin air. The wavefront going vertically up will eventually push some air molecules away from earth without them hitting any other molecules further out. And then gravity will pull them back. That is in fact a kind of reflection.
The speed of sound changes with density, so the wavefront will not move perfectly spherically. That and the gravity induced ripples on the top of the atmosphere will distort and dissipate the energy around the earth in a somewhat complicated pattern. I think. I'm not a physicist. |
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