Site icon Kidpid

The sonic boom problem

Did you know a dinosaur rattles the tail on the ground which covers 1200km/h to detect predators? A snap of the enormous sized claw of shrimps can create a shock wave to kill its prey.

Contents

What about the shock waves in the plain?

We know that measurement MACH number is a ratio of the speed of an object traveling through a gas to the speed of sound in that gas because air is made up of molecules and like other physical substances, the air molecules can compress after which they form shock waves that make flying faster than the speed of sound.

Challenges faced by pilots

How do I detect it?

No sound will be heard as it approaches you as it travels faster than the sound it produced, but you will hear a sonic boom after the object has passed the observer.

When the Mach imaginary hyperbola leaves a booming carpet as it moves forward which makes us determine the area affected by the sonic boom. You can solve the Navier-strokes equation to find how sturdy the sonic boom is.

Researchers are working strenuously to mitigate the effects.

Read More

 

Exit mobile version