Comments
Adavis72 t1_j9a4d4v wrote
How many bowls of cereal is a jackhammer when heard at 100ft?
aecarol1 t1_j9aijaf wrote
You can't ask that kind of question without understanding the physics behind standardized measurements. What is the viscosity of the milk? i.e. whole milk or 2%? What is the relative humidity? Are the bowls glass or plastic?
The Cereal Experimentation Regulation Normalization board (CERN) has spent literally billons of dollars to analyze and study the sounds cereal makes and to standardize noise comparisons. At their cereal study facility in Switzerland they collide Rice Krispies at neatly the speed of light to calculate the noise they make.
Igagug t1_j9avp49 wrote
Don't forget to include how many football fields the width of the bowl is.
AntonOlsen t1_j9b66z4 wrote
My favorite cereal bowl is about 1/8 of a washing machine wide and holds enough to cover a football field with a micrometer of milk.
BitPoet t1_j9bw6v1 wrote
You're looking at about a decismoot, not football fields.
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penelopiecruise t1_j9b65zc wrote
These particles are known to break fast when they impact.
freds_got_slacks t1_j9bbn6t wrote
you joke, but NIST probably has a standard 'rice cereal' somewhere in their catalogue for testing
Masterjts t1_j9bn0jb wrote
Are we gatekeeping sound questions now... this is ... cereal... errr... i mean surreal.
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thecarbonkid t1_j9achgy wrote
Coco pops or crunchy nut cornflakes?
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Fishermans_Worf t1_j9cyik8 wrote
There's a simple formula for that. All weird units but it works out.
C=(3E/L)^O/D
C=Number of bowls
E=Height of the Empire State Building in smoots.
L=Information content of the Library of Congress in HD floppy discs
O=Orbital radius of Luna in yards
D=Distance to cereal in attoparsecs
yeebok t1_j99tsxi wrote
I'm going to have to use this new unit of measurement.
Bigram03 t1_j9djpso wrote
20db higher is... a lot.
LaMadreDelCantante t1_j9d6iqe wrote
This seems odd to me. I know it was supposed to be loud, but I live about 14 miles from the launch pad and it didn't seem, by the very scientific measurement of my ears, to be any louder than any other launch, maybe even quieter.
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Aiku t1_j9964ap wrote
Welcome to r/science, where decibels are re-organized on the Rice Krispie scale. I'm curious: how many football fields did it travel?
blue1_ t1_j99mivx wrote
That information is at least a couple of libraries of congress.
outerlabia t1_j9aik9a wrote
In d&d 5e it would have a movement speed of 108,156 feet if that helps
216,312 feet if it took a dash action
flapd00dle t1_j9avteg wrote
Feet? I need that in moles per millimeters.
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YoBro98765 t1_j9bbpql wrote
Football fields? I need the average distance a Rice Krispie travels during a typical food fight
DrabDonut t1_j9cg37v wrote
The noise or the ship?
vnnie3 t1_j996y6j wrote
As a research student myself, it baffles me to see such "units of measurement" in a paper
seanbrockest t1_j99poc9 wrote
Yeah, "40 million times greater than a bowl of rice crispies" isn't helpful OR scientifically accurate.
I mean come on, everyone knows skim milk makes them louder.
SarcasticAssClown t1_j99u4uo wrote
But it does create good copy! Happens when the lead scientist has a kid majoring in marketing...
DrabDonut t1_j9cga8w wrote
> everyone knows skim milk makes them louder
Hmmm. It’s good, but I don’t think it’s Ig Nobel Prize good.
seanbrockest t1_j9cgm9n wrote
Damnit. I might get laid off next week. Might have to use the spare time to confirm that hypothesis.
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manicdee33 t1_j98rzsh wrote
The USA is best known as the country that will do anything to avoid using the metric system.
Paper this article is based on: https://asa.scitation.org/doi/10.1121/10.0016878
> Significant results include: (a) the solid rocket boosters' ignition overpressure is particularly intense in the direction of the pad flame trench exit; (b) post-liftoff maximum overall levels range from 127 to 136 dB, greater than pre-launch predictions; and (c) the average maximum one-third-octave spectral peak occurred at 20 Hz, causing significant deviation between flat and A-weighted levels.
I'm just lost on how they quantify the "crackling quality" :D
unpluggedcord t1_j98ubi6 wrote
Fwiw the national measuring system is metric, it changed in the 70s. But nobody adopted it.
Primary_Skill3749 t1_j999970 wrote
I don’t think that’s completely accurate as many scientific industries like medicine use metric as a standard in the U.S. Even nasa was using metric well before the 1970s.
unpluggedcord t1_j999dgj wrote
I’m referring to the law that was passed by congress and signed by the president.
simpliflyed t1_j9cc3u4 wrote
I think they meant the bit where you said nobody adopted it. Pedantic either way!
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billsil t1_j99epup wrote
Depends how much it pops.
136 dB is really loud. Also Bels are not really a unit. You take the logarithm of a pressure relative to 20 microPascals (the threshold of human hearing), so it's unitless. Deci-bels are 1/10 as large as a Bel and just make the numbers easier. Otherwise, we'd be talking about 13.6 Bels.
Beyond that I understand part of it. An octave is a power of 2, so 20 Hz to 40 Hz. The 1/3 octave part means that between 2 octaves, you have 3 bands. So for 20 Hz, the range of interest is 20/2^1/3 to 20*2^1/3 (or 15.9 to 25.2 Hz).
The USA is best known as the country that will do anything to avoid using the metric system.
That quote is metric and English friendly.
freds_got_slacks t1_j9bdpqg wrote
In this figure from that paper, while the flat peak is 120 dB centred around 20 Hz, with an A-weighting this only translates to about peak 95 dBA around 200 to 1000 Hz.
Measurements for occupational safety are done with A weighting, but would there be any safety concern with an unweighted 127 dB SPL at 20 Hz? or is A weighting still sufficient ?
Edit: higher res figure
backpackwasmypillow t1_j98s9ux wrote
But, was there a banana in the bowl of Rice Krispies for scale?
zdakat t1_j9a325i wrote
The true unit of measurement, "Bowl of Rice Krispies".
eilradd t1_j9adxll wrote
This headline reads like an onion article
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marketrent OP t1_j98r8mb wrote
Excerpt from the linked release^1 by AIP Publishing about noise measurements taken at five stations located 1.5 km to 5.2 km from the launch pad:^2
>When the Artemis 1 mission was launched by NASA’s Space Launch System, SLS, in November, it became the world’s most powerful rocket, exceeding the thrust of the previous record holder, Saturn 5, by 13%.
>With liftoff came a loud roar heard miles away.
>In JASA Express Letters, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, researchers from Brigham Young University and Rollins College in Florida reported noise measurements during the launch at different locations around Kennedy Space Center.
>The data collected can be used to validate existing noise prediction models, which are needed to protect equipment as well as the surrounding environment and community.
>These data will be useful as more powerful lift vehicles, including the SLS series, are developed.
>
>“We hope these early results will help prevent the spread of possible misinformation, as happened with the Saturn 5,” author Kent Gee said.
>“Numerous websites and discussion forums suggested sound levels that were far too high, with inaccurate reports of the Saturn 5’s sound waves melting concrete and causing grass fires.”
>A characteristic feature of rocket launches is a crackling sound from shock waves.
>These shocks represent instantaneous sound pressure increases that are much louder than crackling noises encountered in everyday life.
>Author Whitney Coyle said, “We found the Artemis-I noise level at 5 km had a crackling quality about 40 million times greater than a bowl of Rice Krispies.”
^1 The Roar and Crackle of Artemis 1, AIP Publishing, 14 Feb. 2023, https://publishing.aip.org/publications/latest-content/the-roar-and-crackle-of-artemis-1/
^2 Kent L. Gee, et al. Space Launch System acoustics: Far-field noise measurements of the Artemis-I launch. JASA Express Letters 3, 023601 (2023); https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0016878
brentm5 t1_j9asqpr wrote
Yeah but how many giraffes would it equal?
2thicc4this t1_j9ayxof wrote
I’m glad to see scientists using fun points of reference like this. Look at how much more engagement it has garnered this paper.
TheCosmicJester t1_j9b1j9g wrote
I now want to know the noise level if you made 40 million bowls of Rice Krispies all at once.
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Adavis72 t1_j9a4661 wrote
New units of measurement. Snap, Crackle, Pop.
Majestic-Macaron6019 t1_j9a8kbz wrote
Americans will use anything but metric, won't we?
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JohnOliverismysexgod t1_j9a91ia wrote
I like it that the unit of measurement is the sound of a bowl of Rice Krispies.
Araella t1_j9abrvx wrote
But what about the snap and the pop?
TheCoolDean t1_j9adu2y wrote
The symphony of crackles.
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Mr_derpderpy t1_j9bzgdk wrote
What in the tarnation unit of hillbilly ass measurement is cereal
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BoraxTheBarbarian t1_j9ctqkz wrote
With the launch hitting 129 dB, that would put the Rice Krispie bowl at 54 dB.
sojayn t1_j9dghdl wrote
Did Little Alex Horne write this study?
Bigram03 t1_j9djget wrote
That is an eipc amount of energy being released...
BigKahuna545 t1_j9et77n wrote
Perhaps as a nod towards the metric system, scientists could use the Guinness fart.
otter111a t1_j9akvfi wrote
Americans. Literally anything besides the metric system
Bokbreath t1_j98rfqr wrote
>At a 5.2 km distance, the noise was 129 decibels, nearly 20 decibels higher than predicted by a prelaunch noise model.
That's about the same level as a jackhammer ... but over 3 miles away.