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July 30, 2006

The Sound of Sand Singing

Desertlandscape1_1

Kenneth Chang wrote about the songs of the dunes in a story that appeared in the July 25 New York Times Science section.

Along with the article online is a video demonstrating a man in Chile "playing" the dunes.

Long story short: If you have the right sand you can hear it sing in your own home.

Here's the Times piece.

    Secrets of the Singing Sand Dunes

    The dunes at Sand Mountain in Nevada sing a note of low C, two octaves below middle C. In the desert of Mar de Dunas in Chile, the dunes sing slightly higher, an F, while the sands of Ghord Lahmar in Morocco are higher yet, a G sharp.

    Since at least the time of Marco Polo, desert travelers have heard the songs of the dunes, a loud — up to 115 decibels — deep hum that can last several minutes. While the songs are steady in frequency, the dunes do not have perfect pitch. At Sand Mountain, for example, dunes can sing slightly different notes at different times, from B to C sharp.

    Scientists already knew that the sounds were generated by avalanches, but were not sure how. One thought had been that the force of an avalanche could cause an entire dune to resonate like a flute or a violin. But if that were true, dunes of different sizes and shapes should produce a cacophony of notes instead of one characteristic tone.

    Now, after five years of research, visiting sand dunes in Morocco, Chile, China and Oman, a team of scientists from the United States, France and Morocco say they have the answer.

    In a paper that will appear in Physical Review Letters, the scientists say that collisions between sand grains cause the motions of the grains to become synchronized. The outer layer of the dune vibrates like the cone of a loudspeaker. The particular note depends primarily on the size of the grains.

    Indeed, no dune was required at all. The scientists shipped sand from a Moroccan desert to a Paris laboratory and reproduced the singing by pushing the sand around with a metal blade.

    “It’s not at all like any other instrument we know,” said one of the scientists, Stéphane Douady of the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris.

    The most beautiful dune tune comes from the sands of Oman. “Very pure sound,” Dr. Douady said. “This one is really singing.” The least musical bits of silicon were those from China, which hardly sang at all.

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Here is a link to Dr. Douady's website.

Here is a link to a page on his website replete with recordings of singing sand from all over the world.

Eerie and wonderful.

July 30, 2006 at 02:01 PM | Permalink


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Comments

How long before someone synthesises grains of perfect dimensions to make a saleable musical instrument?

I can just imagine The Proms in a few years with a revamped Desert Song with real desert.

Posted by: Skipweasel | Jul 30, 2006 4:48:57 PM

This is the kind of science that makes my heart sing, truly.

Posted by: Mb | Jul 30, 2006 2:18:03 PM

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