It puts the frequency in the bucket or it gets the sigterm again
from einfach_orangensaft@sh.itjust.works to science_memes@mander.xyz on 29 Apr 12:04
https://sh.itjust.works/post/36960253

#science_memes

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tetris11@lemmy.ml on 29 Apr 12:30 next collapse

I went on a Bat Walk last week. It was a few of us, walking around the park a little after sunset, pointing our radios at rotted trees and tuning it to frequencies of 45-65Khz. You could hear the bats with their popping sounds before you saw them, tiny things snatching up insects off the surface of the water… incredible maneuverability

The park ranger had this USB sonar device hanging off his phone, which scanned the entire frequency range in fixed bins of about 5Khz or so to produce a living heatmap, and used it to identify the types of bats that we were hearing and just about seeing: Common and Soprano Pippistrellas, and some Noctules.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/8b7dc934-2213-4925-97e2-f112aa509fe1.png">

(src: researchgate.net/…/Peak-frequency-and-signal-dura…)

It was just a group of us, huddled in silence listening to the crackle and pops of these little guys feasting for their late evening breakfast on our radios. It was pretty magical

Orygin@sh.itjust.works on 29 Apr 16:35 collapse

Can your “radio” be called that if they listen for sonic pulses ?
I thought the term radio was exclusive to electromagnetic radiation, does the term also apply for sonars ?
Or maybe bats also use some kind of EM waves to echo locate too ?
Edit: not trying to be pendantic, I’m genuinely curious about this

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 29 Apr 17:33 collapse

It is a radio though, no? If I tune in to 95.8 Khz to access Capitol FM’s (bad) music, I’m hearing that radio band downshifted to 5-20 KHz on my speakers to make it audible for me.

It’s the same principle I thought for bats, I’m just tuning in to lower frequencies.

echolalia@lemmy.ml on 29 Apr 22:02 collapse

pushes glasses up nose well actually,

Radiowaves are electromagnetic radiation (like visible light and microwaves). Sound waves are kinetic motion between air molecules. Your music radio is receiving electromagnetic waves and converting to sound waves through the radio speakers.

I’m not a biologist or a linguist but I think its perfectly reasonable to call a device that captures inaudible sound a radio. But it is different than your music radio.

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 29 Apr 22:11 collapse

Huh. Mind blown. I guess that explains why a regular phone with radio capabilities couldn’t pick up the bat calls without an extra device.

I do recall we had to point the “radios” at the source we were trying to capture, so I guess it’s a sonar of sorts?

xor@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 Apr 13:22 next collapse

fractional distillation is just FFT for liquids…

C8r9VwDUTeY3ZufQRYvq@sopuli.xyz on 29 Apr 22:53 collapse

With extra phase changes?

usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca on 29 Apr 13:39 next collapse

Frequencies

myotheraccount@lemmy.world on 29 Apr 14:05 collapse

Came to comments just to look for this

[deleted] on 29 Apr 14:02 next collapse

.

Gustephan@lemmy.world on 01 May 03:47 next collapse

From the moment I understood the weakness of my analytical math, it disgusted me. I craved the strength and certainty of numerical methods. I aspired to the purity of the Blessed Statistics. Your kind cling to your transforms, as though they will not decay and fail you.

anothercatgirl@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 May 21:59 collapse

Actually that’s a waterfall plot