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The
Helium "Donald Duck" Effect
The human voice
originates when the stream of air flowing up the trachea undergoes
pressure modulations as it passes between the vibrating vocal chords
in the larynx. The sound produced consists of a fundamental frequency,
which determines the voice's pitch, and harmonics (integral multiples)
of this frequency. For adult males and females the average frequencies
of the fundamentals are 130 hertz and 205 hertz, respectively. The
amplitudes of the harmonics for vowel sounds vary approximately
as the inverse of the 1.5 power of the order of the harmonic.
The sound that
exits the mouth is the result of selective transmission by
the configuration of the vocal tract (throat, mouth, and nasal cavities)
produced by the tongue and lip constrictions. For any cavity, sound
waves bouncing back and forth within it will interfere constructively
for certain frequencies (the resonance frequencies) to produce
a loud sound. The cavities in the vocal tract have such resonances,
and the maxima in the sound transmission curve correspond to the
resonance frequencies. Those harmonics near a resonance frequency
of the vocal tract will be strongly transmitted, while the other
harmonics will be damped. The lowest-frequency peak in the transmission
curve is referred to as the fundamental, while the regions
at the other peaks are called formants.
The fundamental
frequency of a resonating cavity is directly proportional to the
speed of sound in the gas occupying the cavity. But from the kinetic
theory of gases, as well as direct measurements, we know that the
speed of sound in an ideal gas (such as dry air) is proportional
to the square root of the ratio T/M, where T is the absolute temperature
of the gas and M is its molecular weight. For a fixed temperature
and cavity volume, it is clear, therefore, that the speed of sound
will be greatest for gases with the smallest molecular weights.
For example, the speed of sound in dry air (M=28.964) at 0 degrees
Celsius is 331.3 m/s. At this temperature in helium (M=4.003) the
speed is 891.2 m/s. The resonance frequencies of the vocal tract,
and hence the formants, are therefore almost 2.7 times higher for
helium than for air. At a pressure of one atmosphere, with pure
helium in your vocal tract instead of air, the pitch of your voice
will be about two and a half octaves higher than usual (like Donald
Duck's). For a helium-oxygen mixture containing 68% helium by volume,
the pitch increase is only one and a half octaves.
REFERENCES:
E. G. Richardson,
"Technical Aspects of Sound" (Elsevier, New York, 1953), Chapter
10.
F. Reif, "Fundamentals
of statistical and thermal physics" (McGraw-Hill, New York), Chapter
5.
Source: How
Stuff Works
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