Why Is It Quiet After It Snows? - podcast episode cover

Why Is It Quiet After It Snows?

Mar 02, 20234 min
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Episode description

After a snowfall, the world seems hushed -- for a while, at least. Learn why fresh snow muffles sound in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://science.howstuffworks.com/nature/climate-weather/atmospheric/quieter-after-snow.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogel Bomb Here. Have you ever noticed how after a big snowfall, the landscape gets very quiet and everything looks like it's covered in that insulation that you find in the walls of houses. Things that had a distinct shape before wheelbarrows, mailboxes, parked cars all become muffled lumps, and the ambient noise were also used to is suddenly gone.

Some of this has to do with the fact that the heavy snow can result in folks staying inside, cutting down on traffic noise and the sounds of kids playing. But there's something else too. Fresh snow actually is kind of like nature's blow in insulation. Snow makes everything it falls upon looks so lumpy because each snowflake is an irregular shape, a six sided crystalline structure that doesn't lend

itself to stacking neatly atop other snowflakes. As billions of snowflakes fall on top of one another, they don't merge together and flow off of the landscape like rain does. Instead, they pile up on each other like a bunch of orgamy, a creating a material that has lots of tiny holes

between each flake. This porous material smooths out all the sharp edges that usually make the things that snowfalls upon distinguishable from each other, and those little nooks and crannies between the snowflakes allow sound waves to enter, but then strip them of their energy as the waves make their way through that fluffy material. The sound travels in mechanical waves. If you've ever heard the tagline from the movie Alien

in space, no one can hear you scream. That's because space is relatively empty of stuff, and in order for something to make noise, physical molecules of stuff, be they gaseous, liquid, or solid, must be jiggled around in order for the sound waves to be transmitted. A temperature also affects how quickly waves can move. They speed up in warmer weather

and slow down when it gets cold. Not only can sound waves in cold weather be a little sluggish, but falling snow can interfere with them, making sounds and a winter wonderland seem muffled. A blanket of fresh snow also does a lot to dampen noise. The absorption of sound is measured using a scale called sound absorption coefficient. Alpha, which measures how well a material absorbs sound on a

scale from zero to one. The sound absorption rating for snow is between zero point five to zero point nine, which means, at its most effective, a few inches of new fallen snow provides an impressive amount of acoustic insulation for a lot of different frequencies of sound. A one study published in twenty sixteen found that a couple inches of snow can absorb roughly sixty percent of ambient sound, but that quiet doesn't last long. The sound dampening air

pockets and snow break down not long after snowfalls. That's because the shape of the delicate snowflakes changes pretty rapidly once they settle to the ground. As they begin to snowgle in together and or melt, the space between them shrinks, leaving fewer spaces for sound to travel and get trapped. In addition to that, oh once the sun hits the snow, a thin layer of ice forms on top almost immediately, turning that porous material that trapped noise in its first

hours into a sound wave reflecting surface. And that means that it turns that silent landscape into a sort of amphitheater. So the next time you hear that hush of a new fallen snow, enjoy it. It probably won't last long. Today's episode is based on the article why does it get so Quiet after a Snowfall? On howstworks dot com written by Jesselyn Shields. The Brainstuff is production by Heart Radio in partnership with HowStuffWorks dot Com and is produced

by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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