On 27 August 1883, the Earth let out a noise louder than any it has made since.
It was 10:02 a.m. local time when the sound emerged from
the island of Krakatoa, which sits between Java and Sumatra in
Indonesia. It was heard 1,300 miles away in the Andaman and Nicobar
islands (“extraordinary sounds were heard, as of guns firing”); 2,000
miles away in New Guinea and Western Australia (“a series of loud
reports, resembling those of artillery in a north-westerly direction”);
and even 3,000 miles away in the Indian Ocean island of Rodrigues, near
Mauritius* (“coming from the eastward, like the distant roar of heavy
guns.”1) In all, it was heard by
people in over 50 different geographical locations, together spanning an
area covering a thirteenth of the globe.
Think, for a moment, just how crazy this is.
If you’re in Boston and someone tells you that they heard a sound coming
from New York City, you’re probably going to give them a funny look.
But Boston is a mere 200 miles from New York. What we’re talking about
here is like being in Boston and clearly hearing a noise coming from
Dublin, Ireland. Travelling at the speed of sound (766 miles or 1,233
kilometers per hour), it takes a noise about 4 hours to cover that
distance. This is the most distant sound that has ever been heard in
recorded history.
So what could possibly
create such an earth-shatteringly loud bang? A volcano on Krakatoa had
just erupted with a force so great that it tore the island apart, emitting a plume of smoke that reached 17 miles into the atmosphere, according to a geologist who witnessed it1. You could use this observation to calculate that stuff
spewed out of the volcano at over 1,600 miles per hour—or nearly half a
mile per second. That’s more than twice the speed of sound.
This explosion created a deadly tsunami with waves over a
hundred feet (30 meters) in height. One hundred sixty-five coastal
villages and settlements were swept away and entirely destroyed. In all,
the Dutch (the colonial rulers of Indonesia at the time) estimated the
death toll at 36,417, while other estimates exceed 120,0002,3.
The British ship Norham Castle was 40 miles from
Krakatoa at the time of the explosion. The ship’s captain wrote in his
log, “So violent are the explosions that the ear-drums of over half my
crew have been shattered. My last thoughts are with my dear wife. I am
convinced that the Day of Judgement has come.”2
***
In general, sounds are
caused not by the end of the world but by fluctuations in air pressure.
A barometer at the Batavia gasworks (100 miles away from Krakatoa)
registered the ensuing spike in pressure at over 2.5 inches of mercury1,2.
That converts to over 172 decibels of sound pressure, an unimaginably
loud noise. To put that in context, if you were operating a jackhammer
you’d be subject to about 100 decibels. The human threshold for pain is
near 130 decibels, and if you had the misfortune of standing next to a
jet engine, you’d experience a 150 decibel sound. (A 10 decibel increase
is perceived by people as sounding roughly twice as loud.) The Krakatoa
explosion registered 172 decibels at 100 miles from the source. This is
so astonishingly loud, that it’s inching up against the limits of what
we mean by “sound.”
When you hum a note or speak a word, you’re wiggling air
molecules back and forth dozens or hundreds of times per second,
causing the air pressure to be low in some places and high in other
places. The louder the sound, the more intense these wiggles, and the
larger the fluctuations in air pressure. But there’s a limit to how loud
a sound can get. At some point, the fluctuations in air pressure are so
large that the low pressure regions hit zero pressure—a vacuum—and you
can’t get any lower than that. This limit happens to be about 194
decibels for a sound in Earth’s atmosphere. Any louder, and the sound is
no longer just passing through the air, it’s actually pushing the air
along with it, creating a pressurized burst of moving air known as a shock wave.
Closer to Krakatoa, the sound was well over this limit,
producing a blast of high pressure air so powerful that it ruptured the
eardrums of sailors 40 miles away. As this sound travelled thousands of
miles, reaching Australia and the Indian Ocean, the wiggles in pressure
started to die down, sounding more like a distant gunshot. Over 3,000
miles into its journey, the wave of pressure grew too quiet for human
ears to hear, but it continued to sweep onward, reverberating for days
across the globe. The atmosphere was ringing like a bell, imperceptible
to us but detectable by our instruments.
The Krakatoa explosion registered 172 decibels at 100 miles from the source. This is so astonishingly loud, that it’s inching up against the limits of what we mean by “sound.”
By 1883, weather stations in
scores of cities across the world were using barometers to track changes
in atmospheric pressure. Six hours and 47 minutes after the Krakatoa
explosion, a spike of air pressure was detected in Calcutta. By 8 hours,
the pulse reached Mauritius in the west and Melbourne and Sydney in the
east. By 12 hours, St. Petersburg noticed the pulse, followed by
Vienna, Rome, Paris, Berlin, and Munich. By 18 hours the pulse had
reached New York, Washington DC, and Toronto1.
Amazingly, for as many as 5 days after the explosion, weather stations
in 50 cities around the globe observed this unprecedented spike in
pressure re-occuring like clockwork, approximately every 34 hours. That
is roughly how long it takes sound to travel around the entire planet.
In all, the pressure waves from Krakatoa circled the
globe three to four times in each direction. (Each city felt up to seven
pressure spikes because they experienced shock waves travelling in
opposite directions from the volcano1.) Meanwhile, tidal
stations as far away as India, England, and San Francisco measured a
rise in ocean waves simultaneous with this air pulse, an effect that had
never been seen before. It was a sound that could no longer be heard
but that continued moving around the world, a phenomenon that people
nicknamed “the great air-wave.”
Recently, an incredible home video of a volcanic
eruption taken by a couple on vacation in Papua New Guinea started
making the rounds on the Internet. If you watch closely, this video
gives you a sense for the pressure wave created by a volcano.
When
the volcano erupts, it produces a sudden spike in air pressure; you can
actually watch as it moves through the air, condensing water vapor into
clouds as it travels. The people taking the video are (fortunately) far
enough away that pressure wave takes a while to reach them. When it
does finally hit the boat, some 13 seconds after the explosion, you hear
what sounds like a huge gunshot accompanied by a sudden blast of air.
Multiplying 13 seconds by the speed of sound tells us that the boat was
about 4.4 kilometers, or 2.7 miles, away from the volcano. This is
somewhat akin to what happened at Krakatoa, except the ‘gunshot’ in that
case could be heard not just three but three thousand miles, away, a
mind-boggling demonstration of the immense destructive power that nature
can unleash.
Aatish Bhatia is a recent physics Ph.D. working at Princeton University to bring science and engineering to a wider audience. He writes the award-winning science blog Empirical Zeal, hosted at Wired, and is on Twitter as @aatishb.
References
[1] Judd, John Wesley, et al. The Eruption of Krakatoa: And Subsequent Phenomena.
Trรผbner & Company, 1888. (a comprehensive data-filled report of the
Krakatoa eruption commissioned by the Royal Society, accessible for
free under public domain)
[2] Winchester, Simon. Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded. Penguin UK, 2004.
[3] Simkin, Tom, and Richard S. Fiske. Krakatau, 1883, the Volcanic Eruption and Its Effects. Smithsonian Inst Pr, 1983.
Thanks to Nicole Sharp and Will Slaton for helpful discussions about the physics of the Krakatoa explosion.
This article was originally published on
September 29, 2014, by Nautilus, and is republished here with
permission.
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