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ART. 108 - On the Circulation of Air observed in Kundt's Tubes, and on some Allied Acoustical Problems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

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Summary

Experimenters in Acoustics have discovered more than one set of phenomena, apparently depending for their explanation upon the existence of regular currents of air resulting from vibratory motion, of which theory has as yet rendered no account. This is not, perhaps, a matter for surprise, when we consider that such currents, involving as they do circulation of the fluid, could not arise in the absence of friction, however great the extent of vibration. And even when we are prepared to include in our investigations the influence of friction, by which the motion of fluid in the neighbourhood of solid bodies may be greatly modified, we have no chance of reaching an explanation, if, as is usual, we limit ourselves to the supposition of infinitely small motion and neglect the squares and higher powers of the mathematical symbols by which it is expressed.

In the present paper three problems of this kind are considered, two of which are illustrative of phenomena observed by Faraday. In these problems the fluid may be treated as incompressible. The more important of them relates to the currents generated over a vibrating plate, arranged as in Chladni's experiments. It was discovered by Savart that very fine powder does not collect itself at the nodal lines, as does sand in the production of Chladni's figures, but gathers itself into a cloud which, after hovering for a time, settles itself over the places of maximum vibration.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 239 - 257
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1900

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