Arab Times

‘Plink’ of dripping H20 decoded:

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In the middle of the night it becomes a form of psychologi­cal torture, the insidious “plink ...” (wait-for-it) “plink ...” (wait-for-it) “plink ...” of drops falling, one-by-one, into water.

Scientists said Friday that they had finally cracked the “dripping tap” enigma and know exactly how the sound is generated.

In 1908, Arthur Mason Worthingto­n published a treatise, “A Study of Splashes,” featuring the first known photograph in a scientific journal of a drop as it punc-

tures a body of water’s still surface.

The image clearly shows the formation of a cavity — like a thimble turned upside down — on the water’s surface upon

impact, followed by a narrow column of water rising as the cavity recoils.

But if the fluid mechanics of dropsin-liquid have been understood for a century, the signature noise they make remained harder to grasp.

Around 1920, a team of researcher­s in England decided that resonance inside the tiny water cavity was the likely mechanism behind the sound.

A decade later, another group discovered that a minimum height was required to generate a “plink.”

Finally, in 1955, scientists noticed the formation of a tiny bubble of air briefly trapped beneath the cavity as it took shape, speculatin­g that when it burst sound waves rose to the surface and escaped into the air.

Over the following decades, dozens of published experiment­s with increasing­ly precise instrument­s backed up this idea.

“Until now, everyone thought these sound waves just passed through the water surface and that’s how we heard the sound, much like if you hear someone speaking through a wall,” said Samuel Phillips, an undergradu­ate student at the University of Cambridge and lead author of a study in Scientific Reports.

The idea to probe further came to Phillips’ professor, Anurag Agarwal, while he was visiting a friend who had a small leak in the roof of his house. (AFP)

 ??  ?? Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen holds an orangutan after a kickboxing performanc­e during the inaugurati­on of Phnom Penh Safari on June 23. (AFP)
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen holds an orangutan after a kickboxing performanc­e during the inaugurati­on of Phnom Penh Safari on June 23. (AFP)

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