US scientists record the highest possible voice under water
American scientists have created the highest possible underwater sound, more than 270 decibels, equivalent to two jet engines, created using small water jets and powerful lasers.
The Stanford University Energy Department collaborated with researchers from Rutgers University to produce the result of the record crash, and the result was so high that it reached as high as possible scientifically underwater. If they tried to reach a higher sound, they would fail, This is because the medium through which the sound travels begins to collapse at the maximum point, so no higher sound can be reached.
Technically, this is a process called the cavity and is seen similarly in the heat. In the end, the atoms of the material collapse and there is no more heat to produce them.
The researchers used a device called a name Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS, A powerful x-ray machine that can do things like creating holes and heating water to 100,000 degrees (about 180,000 degrees Fahrenheit) in less than one millionth of a millionth of a second.
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