Iran Daily

Scientists tackle

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water falling into a bucket placed underneath the leak, I started thinking about this problem.

“The next day I discussed it with my friend and another visiting academic, and we were all surprised that no one had actually answered the question of what causes the sound.”

Back in the lab, Agarwal set up an experiment featuring an ultrahigh-speed camera, microphone and hydrophone.

He and his colleagues used the instrument­s to document and measure leaking water droplets falling into a pool of water.

As many previous experiment­s have documented, a droplet forms a small cavity, like a crater, when it hits the surface of the water.

This indentatio­n quickly recoils as a result of surface tension and a water column rises back up. Due to the speed of the recoil action, a tiny bubble gets trapped beneath the surface of the water.

Until now, most scientists surmised the ‘plink’ sound caused by a dripping faucet could be explained by the impact of the falling droplet.

But the new measuremen­ts made by Agarwal showed the cavity-creation process and splash are essentiall­y silent. The hydrophone revealed the trapped air bubble as the true source of the ‘plink’.

Phillips, now a PHD student in the engineerin­g department at Cambridge, said, “Using highspeed cameras and high-sensitivit­y microphone­s, we were able to directly observe the oscillatio­n of the air bubble for the first time, showing that the air bubble is the key driver for both the underwater sound, and the distinctiv­e airborne ‘plink’ sound.

“However, the airborne sound is not simply the underwater sound field spreading to the surface, as had been previously thought.”

A few studies had previously hinted at this possibilit­y, but Agarwal’s study is the first to confirm the phenomenon through precise and direct measuremen­t.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, also showed the mechanism is most efficient when the air bubble is closer to the surface. When the bubble triggers oscillatio­ns of the surface at the bottom of the cavity, a piston-like mechanism drives sound waves into the air.

 ??  ?? A new study explained the annoying ‘plink’ sound made by a dripping faucet.
A new study explained the annoying ‘plink’ sound made by a dripping faucet.

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