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http://news.yahoo.com/mysterious-hum-dr ... 59328.html
"Usefulness" is a relative thing, and depends upon what you need to get done. Modulation schemes are all about packing more information into lower bandwidths - it's theoretically possible to pack extremely high amounts of data into low frequency signals - though it may not be all that practical. Also consider that lower frequency sounds tend to penetrate through material better - you could conceivably create a system similar to ultrasonic system, but at lower frequencies for longer distances...Alter-Fox wrote:From my knowledge of sound (as an audio engineer though, so this is not my specialty) the lower the frequency of a sound the less information it can carry because the distance between the expansion and compression of the wave is longer. I'm not sure a sound that deep would be able to carry enough information to be useful for communication.
I would say, like Krom, that this is a completely earthly hum.
Mine is similar, though I'd describe it more like a 'single tone' (yes, very much like those super-high-pitch hearing-test tones) than a 'whistle'.Duper wrote:.. my tinnitus is a high pitched whistle... actually about 5 different frequencies. they're all at the high end like you used to hear as a kid in school when they tested your hearing...
Elephants can communicate with a very low frequency rumble, so communication is possible.Alter-Fox wrote:From my knowledge of sound (as an audio engineer though, so this is not my specialty) the lower the frequency of a sound the less information it can carry because the distance between the expansion and compression of the wave is longer. I'm not sure a sound that deep would be able to carry enough information to be useful for communication.
I would say, like Krom, that this is a completely earthly hum.