- ACOUSTICS.
- AERONAUTICS.
- CHEMISTRY.
- ELECTRICITY.
- GALVANISM.
- HEAT.
- HYDRAULICS.
- MAGNETISM.
- MECHANICS.
- MICROSCOPE.
- OPTICS AND OPTICAL ILLUSIONS.
- PHOTOGRAPHY.
- PNEUMATICS.
- SPECTRUM.
ACOUSTICS.
Acoustics is the science relating to sound and hearing. Sound is heard when any shock or impulse is given to the air, or to any other body which is in contact directly or indirectly with the ear.
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SOUND AND NOISE.
Noises are made by the cracks of whips, the beating of hammers, the creak of a file or saw, or the hubbub of a multitude. But when a bell is struck, the bow of a violin drawn across the strings, or the wetted finger turned round a musical glass, we have what are properly called sounds.
SOUNDS, HOW PROPAGATED.
Sounds are propagated on all bodies much after the manner that waves are in water, with a velocity of 1,142 feet in a second. Sounds in liquids and in solids are more rapid than in air. Two stones rubbed together may be heard in water at half a mile; solid bodies convey sounds to great distances, and pipes may be made to convey the voice over every part of the house.