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I think there's a tweak for that....not sure if it works.... might need a bigger jar....
I'm experimenting with the Franck Tchang Acoustic Resonators right now which are very potent in how they operate tho exactly how or why is hard to fathom. But never mind that. The point here is that the inventor's explanations started me thinking along certain lines that intersect with your question.
a jar of the air from The Who concert a while back would work too,small doses of course.
For example -- and again in relation to these resonators which are on my mind right now -- people who have experimented with super tweeters out to 100kHz report on how it improves bass performance and focus. Sounds bizarre at first.
Wave theory suggests that you will get the average of two frequencies if you add a 20Khz wave to a 10Khz wave i.e a 15 Khz wave.
Hi,The higher the density of a medium the faster the speed of sound travelling through it. So speed of sound is always faster in liquids and solids as compared to air. This also means at a given temperature sound will also travel faster in humid air. Sound also travels faster at higher temperatures as air is already in a faster state of motion. Higher pressure means higher density faster sound.