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At a rock concert, the sound intensity 1.0 m in front of the bank of loudspeakers is 0.10 W/m2 . A fan is 30 m from the loudspeakers. Her eardrums have a diameter of 8.4 mm. How much sound energy is transferred to each eardrum in 1.0 second?

User Ken Arnold
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The concepts used to solve this problem are sound power, area of ear drum, and inverse square law. First find the intensity
I_2 using inverse square law for different distances. Then find the area of the ear drum using the diameter and finally find the energy transferred to each ear drum in one second. Intensity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the source:


I \propto (1)/(r^2)

Here,

r = Distance from the source,


(I_1)/(I_2) = (r_2^2)/(r_1^2)


I_2 = I_1 (r_1^2)/(r_2^2)


I_2 = (0.10W/m^2)(((1m)^2)/((30m)^2))


I_2 = 1.11*10^(-4)W/m^2

Now the expression for the Area of ear drum is


A= (\pi d^2)/(4)


A = (\pi (8.4mm(1m)/(10^3mm))^2)/(4)


A = 5.5*10^(-5)m^2

The expression for Sound power is


P = AI_2

Replacing,


P= (5.5*10^(-5)m^2)(1.11*10^(-4)W/m^2)


P = 6.1*10^(-9)W = 6.1*10^(-9)J/s

Therefore the energy reached per second is
6.1*10^(-9)J

User Marvinfrede
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