Duck's Quacks Really Do Echo
troc writes "Finally that age-old myth of the duck's quack has been overturned. It has long been thought that the duck's quack did not produce an echo, so some boffins with spare time and a duck did some experiments.
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This sounds like a load to me.
Sound echos. All sound. A duck's quack is sound. Therefor, a duck's quack will echo. QED.
What magical properties would cause a duck's quack not to reflect off a flat surface, or to magically cancel itself out?
This sounds much like the "If you exceed 60 MPH, you will explode" myth that was commonplace back before trains exceeded 60 MPH - the blitherings of people who don't know what they are talking about - much like someplace else we all know of.
Point me to one physicist who would published any public work saying "A duck's quack won't echo." Just one.
What next - somebody trying to evaluate the efficacy of NaCl in trapping avians when applied to their aft flight surfaces?
www.eFax.com are spammers
This Urban Legend was definitively put to rest in 1998.
First scientist: "Say, Bob, I've got a bit of free time, so I'm going up the mountain with my duck. You wanna join me?"
:-D
Is it just me, or does that sound like it came straight out of a Farside comic?
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
is available on the BBC's news site. Apparently the article on Ananova was edited a little too completely for space, and lost the explanation of the reason for the study.
The full article makes clear that Prof. Cox's work is used in the design of facilities like concert halls, train stations, etc. In other words, the duck was incidental. What he was concerned with was the qualities that reduced the echo.
Suggesting his work deserves an IgNoble (as someone earlier in the thread offered) begs comparisons to Sen. Proxmire. Try to be a little better informed before you criticize so broadly.
Allegedly real newspaper headline from 1998:
Man Struck by Lightning Faces Battery Charge