Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Cocoa stir
If you stir a mug of cocoa fast into a small whirlpool and then tap the edge of the mug repeatedly with the spoon which you used for stirring why does the pitch level of the sound produced change upwards?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Beckyman, the 'probably' referred to the reason that the height of liquid determined the ring frequency. It is not unreasonable to assume that the ring frequency is related to the density of the fluid in contact with the vessel. Nevertheless the ring frequency is related to the depth of liquid, whatever it's density as my experiment demonstrated. Try this, take a wine glass (because they ring well), half fill it with water then get a small poly bag and trap some air in one corner and seal it by twisting the body of the bag. Now tap the wine glass as you insert the air filled bag into the centre of the water so that the water level goes up. You will notice the frequency going down although the amount of water in the glass has remained the same. This is the same phenomenom as the stirred liquidi ie. there is a conical depression in the water surface, though in the case of the stirred liguid it is caused by centripetal force.
//Very interesting and probably true mibns, but the OP asked about tapping the edge of the mug. I am with jomifl on this one.//
Me too, Wildwood. His technique of using an object to displace the water, causing the water level to rise produced an obvious lowering of pitch for me as well.
While I concur with Jomifl's explanation for the relationship between water level and pitch, I have not been able to reproduce or account for the bizarre effect demonstrated in the videos I submitted which might well be demonstrating an entirely different phenomenon which I have not been able to duplicate and the cause of which for me remains a mystery.
Me too, Wildwood. His technique of using an object to displace the water, causing the water level to rise produced an obvious lowering of pitch for me as well.
While I concur with Jomifl's explanation for the relationship between water level and pitch, I have not been able to reproduce or account for the bizarre effect demonstrated in the videos I submitted which might well be demonstrating an entirely different phenomenon which I have not been able to duplicate and the cause of which for me remains a mystery.