Acoustics is the interdisciplinary science that deals with the study of all mechanical waves in gases, liquids, and solids including vibration, sound, ultrasound and infrasound. Applications of acoustics are for instance the audio and noise control industries.
When to Use this Tag
Use acoustics when asking questions about the generation, propagation, or absorption of sound. Additionally, the tag can be used for questions regarding the working principles and characteristics of electroacoustic transducers.
Introduction
Acoustic waves may exist in any elastic medium which is capable of experiencing compression and rarefaction. This is manifestly true in the case of liquids and gases. However even solids, which are often taken to be perfectly incompressible, can sustain small oscillations of their constituent atoms about some mean position which enables wave propagation throughout the material. Generally speaking, the higher the compressibility of a material, the lower its speed of sound.
Equations of Motion
Wave motion in a variety of different contexts is governed by the classical acoustic wave equation. This linear partial differential equation has been derived on the hypothesis that the perturbation quantity is small relative to a mean value. Generalizations to this equation may be obtained which incorporate more exotic physical effects such as dispersion, convection of acoustic energy, and nonlinear wave steepening.
Prerequisites for Studying Acoustics
Phys: Some exposure to rigid body dynamics and fluid mechanics
Math: Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs), Partial Differential Equations (PDEs)