well this is skating on thin black ice with cool blades,
why? I hear you ask, well it is to capture the sound as the ice beneath the skater cracks but is still thick enough, just, to support his weight, making the laser-like
sounds in this fascinating video clip by Nat Geo, Swedish photograher and
filmmaker Henrik Trygg and mathematician MÃ¥rten Ajne, both ice skating
enthusiasts, explain how black ice makes those weird sounds, so why is black
ice so good at producing those amazing, laser-like sounds? "In the video, the
sounds are created by me skating on it, there is a distinctive sonorous tone
and the noise from cracks striking, Black ice
doesn’t expand and contract because it’s kept warm by the underlying water,
even when it’s cold out, Isothermal would be the technical word for it, in a
narrow temperature range, the sonorous
tone is the song of black ice, best heard (and recorded) from a short distance, the layman explanation would be that the tone is inversely related to the
thickness of the ice, the thinner the ice, the higher the tone, intriguingly,
the ice is about to collapse at high C, the supposedly highest note of a
soprano opera singer, for example in Puccini’s Turandot," I think I will stick to walking on the bank!
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