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re: (meteorobs) Electrophonic sounds (was: Seattle Fireball)



Conceivably, tooth fillings could occasionally do that too!
How would you duck from that!
(Boy meteorobs is slow....we're all doing our end of year homework I guess)

Whoooooooooooooooooooooossssssssssssssssshhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhing Wayne
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Original Text
From: Lew Gramer <lewkaren@tiacdot net>, on 2/6/97 3:21 PM:
To: <meteorobs@latrade.com>

At 01:52 PM 2/6/97 -0500, THOMAS T WOJACK wrote:
>You could hear through closed windows!  It must of been very loud!  

The interesting thing about electrophonic sounds is that they MIGHT be 
heard in closed areas, even where a sonic boom couldn't be. Assuming that 
they are in fact due to emissions from the trail at radio (and microwave?) 
wavelengths, they could conceivab
ly be heard by anyone who happened to be near a "receiver": a chain-link 
fence, a complex of ferrous pipes in a wall, even a guard-rail...

Of course, some people suggest that "electrophonic sounds" are not real 
physical effects at all, but rather simply psychosensory phenomena: 
essentially (I guess) we *expect* to hear a crackling sound when we witness 
a very bright light - and so our brai
ns DO hear the sound, whether it's there or not...

I guess the real answer to this won't come until some determined amateur 
(or lucky professional) manages to correlate an electrophonic sound with a 
long-wavelength emission - or confirms that there is no correlation.

Lew