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  2. Can anti-noise silence a highway? | Science Questions

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/questions/can-anti-noise-silence-highway

    Trevor - The loudspeakers pumping out the cancelling noise is increasing the amount of sound energy in the neighbourhood. There will be places, maybe your neighbour’s house, where the noise will actually be worse. Finally, even if you could get it to work, it will always be much cheaper to build and maintain a noise barrier, but all is not lost.

  3. What do tickles tell us about the brain? | Interviews

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/what-do-tickles-tell-us-about-brain

    Just in the way those noise cancelling headphones work. On airplanes, they cancel off the external sounds. You hear the internal sound coming from your speakers, but the brain would have to make a prediction, rather complex prediction of what was going to happen.

  4. Science of the Big Bang Theory | Science News - The Naked...

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/science-news/science-big-bang-theory

    So, I'd start with a quote from one of the characters, just a scrap of dialogue mentioning the noise cancelling headphones and then I lead in from that to, how do noise cancelling headphones work, what is actually going on, the different types of noise cancelling headphones and the way they are engineered.

  5. Why do speakers make an odd noise when near a ringing phone?

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/questions/why-do-speakers-make-odd-noise...

    Why do all speakers make the same odd noise when they are near a ringing phone & intercept the signal? Answer Dave - The phone is sending out a signal to all the nearby base stations, essentially telling them where it is, and I think possibly also to allow the base station to characterise what direction it should send the the signal in, and all ...

  6. P&O Pioneer: the ship of the future - The Naked Scientists

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/po-pioneer-ship-future

    We've come down the decks to the engine level, starting off the tour in the diesel generator room. There's not much to say, which is probably a good thing given the noise, but this is the past. Let's go see the future. Dmitri - My name is Dmitri. I am chief engineer on the P&O Pioneer. We are in a battery room now that's one of 4 battery rooms.

  7. How does a single speaker play many simultaneous frequencies?

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/questions/how-does-single-speaker-play...

    You've probably seen a sine wave: it's basically just a very specific "zigzaggy / wiggly" line. Now, if the speaker moves in any other pattern than that - you could imagine it's moving slowly with a big wiggle and then on top of that superimposed, there's a little wiggle - then it would be outputting sound with the low frequency, the big slow wiggle, and also a much higher frequency (the small ...

  8. Why are we sensitive to red green and blue? | Science Questions

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/questions/why-are-we-sensitive-red-green...

    Dave - Okay, I've built some experiments on this recently and basically, this is due to what you think the three primary colours are, aren't necessarily actually the three primary colours.

  9. A simple plastic scanner | Interviews | Naked Scientists

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/simple-plastic-scanner

    ©The Naked Scientists® 2000–2020 | The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks created by Dr Chris Smith.

  10. Can we hear silence? | Interviews | Naked Scientists

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/can-we-hear-silence

    James - So let's have another go. We're going to repeat the experiment, but with silences instead of beeps cutting through ambient noise in a bustling restaurant. It's the same format as last time, two short silences followed by a longer silence. Which seems longer overall? <Two periods of silence>

  11. The scariest sound in the Savanna | Interviews - The Naked...

    www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/scariest-sound-savannah

    And the question as to whether this fear is innate or learned is very difficult to answer. Naturally, awareness of predatory noise spreads quickly through a community, but there are also studies that say certain prey species fear the sound of predators that have been extinct in that area for sometimes many, many generations.