In the late 80s I worked in a low cluster of buildings, each of which was topped with a band of vertical ridges spaced about 4" apart (sort of like a corrugated roof, but with vertical corrugations). One day a thunderstorm came through, and we discovered that the pulses of thunder, when they hit the corrugations, reflected as a quickly falling tone. The corrugations were working as an acoustic diffraction grating, with different frequencies reflecting in different directions.
okay who wants to build a musical instrument that works by beaming white noise at a bunch of these things, with some way for the user to rotate them quickly and accurately
catlifeonmars 5 hours ago [-]
I’m wondering if you can change the shape in such a way that rotating one would produce an arpeggio.
wizardforhire 3 hours ago [-]
I’m game to do some heavy lifting if you’re serious.
chrisweekly 3 hours ago [-]
This is the kind of thing that keeps me coming back to HN more often than I should. So cool.
ttoinou 28 minutes ago [-]
That does seem like witchcraft
Onavo 31 minutes ago [-]
Solid state FFT?
fellatio 2 minutes ago [-]
It would need to do something like spit out each frequency in a different direction then you use light material in circle that flaps when sound energy is transmitted in that direction. Sounds possible. Analog computer of sorts.
bix6 2 hours ago [-]
How the heck do you arrive at such a crazy shape wow this is amazing.
neuroelectron 7 hours ago [-]
One more step toward building the pyramids.
bobmcnamara 5 hours ago [-]
Whoa it's like an ear but for light!
recursive 2 hours ago [-]
But for sounds
ttoinou 30 minutes ago [-]
Seems like you are filtering the OP white noise broad band joke into a coherent explanation
- adaptive sports for visually impaired players like beep baseball?
- robot swarm members knowing their relative 2d position with a single microphone? (frequency for angle, amplitude for distance)
- a cheap, durable way for human workers to track the rotation cadence of slowly rotating machinery?