Skip to content

The sea sounds experiment

audio
Posted under Physics

David Sharp takes his microphone and shell into a recording studio to find out why you can hear the sounds of the sea when you hold a shell to your ear

07 Jul
2009

Why can you hear the sea when you put a shell to your ear? Many of us have picked up a seashell, held it against an ear and heard the sound of the sea. But where does this sound, that is so reminiscent of waves splashing on the shore, actually come from?

The answer is that the sound you hear when pressing a shell against your ear comes from the surrounding environment. Wherever you are in the world, there is always some ambient noise present, however quiet it may be. When you put a shell to your ear it acts as a resonant chamber, amplifying some of the frequencies present in this background noise. These accentuated frequencies combine to give the characteristic shhhhh sound that reminds us of waves breaking on a beach. The exact nature of the sound depends on the shape and size of the shell. The larger the shell, the lower the frequencies that are emphasised and the deeper in tone the sound that is heard.

The following two audio tracks demonstrate this effect. Each recording was made by positioning a microphone at the entrance to a large seashell. The same recording levels were used in both cases.

Surf or turf?

This first audio track was recorded in a courtyard located outside a group of offices. The background noise level was as you might expect on a normal day. If you play track one, you should be able to hear the characteristic shhhhh sound associated with putting a seashell against your ear. If you listen carefully, you may also be able to hear some birdsong in the background.

Sound wave recorded in courtyard Open2 team

Save this MP3 file to your computer You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to use our MP3 player - download Flash. Copyrighted The Open University Download What can I do with this?

Shell sound recording outside David Sharp

Sounds of silence

The second audio track was recorded in an anechoic chamber – a room whose walls, floor and ceiling are lined with foam wedges. This provides a high level of soundproofing, ensuring that the ambient noise within the anechoic chamber is minimal. If you play track two, you should be able to hear that the characteristic shhhhh sound is now barely audible.

Sound wave recorded in an anehoic chamber Open2 team

Save this MP3 file to your computer You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to use our MP3 player - download Flash. Copyrighted Used with permission Download What can I do with this?

Shell sound recording in anechoic chamber David Sharp

The real thing

You can compare the sound from a seashell with the real sound of the sea by listening to this final audio track. It was recorded on a beach and features the soothing sound of waves lapping on to the shore.

Sound wave recorded by the sea Open2 team

Save this MP3 file to your computer You need the Flash Player (version 7 or higher) to use our MP3 player - download Flash. Copyrighted Used with permission Download What can I do with this?

Waves lapping against stones [© 2008 Jupiterimages Corporation] Jupiter Images

Find out more

Rate and share this page:

You haven't rated. Average rating 4.6 out of 5, based on 8 ratings

Share this page:

.

More like this

Comments

Be the first to post a comment.

Login or Register to post comments

Article Information

Publication details
Wednesday, 01st July 2009
Tuesday, 07th July 2009

Copyright information
• Body text - Copyright: The Open University
• Image 'Sound wave recorded in courtyard' - Copyrighted: Open2 team
• Image 'Shell sound recording outside' - Copyrighted: David Sharp
• Image 'Sound wave recorded in an anehoic chamber' - Copyrighted: Open2 team
• Image 'Shell sound recording in anechoic chamber' - Copyrighted: David Sharp
• Image 'Sound wave recorded by the sea' - Copyrighted: Open2 team
• Image 'Waves lapping against stones [© 2008 Jupiterimages Corporation]' - Copyrighted: Jupiter Images
• Audio 1 - Copyrighted: The Open University
• Audio 2 - Copyrighted: Used with permission
• Audio 3 - Copyrighted: Used with permission

About OpenLearn

Hide

Explore

Try

Study

OU Courses

OpenLearn Now

Hide

Tag Clouds

Hide

Site Cloud

What are Tag Clouds?

My Cloud

Discover the latest about your passions - Sign In or Register and start a personal tag cloud.

What are Tag Clouds?
http://www.open.edu/openlearn/sites/all/themes/ole/flash/tagcloud.swf

Creative Commons License Except for third party materials and otherwise stated, content on this site is made available
under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Licence

/openlearn/sites/all/themes/ole/