Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics

Bubbles couple to sound fields to an extraordinary extent, generating and scattering sound, and changing the chemical, physical and biological environments around them when excited to pulsate by an appropriate sound field. This paper accompanies a plenary lecture, opening with the way that the sound...

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Main Author: Leighton, Timothy
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/1/2017_Leighton_ISVR24_Plenary_paper_6_20170323163527913.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:415948 2023-07-30T04:04:55+02:00 Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics Leighton, Timothy 2017-07 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/1/2017_Leighton_ISVR24_Plenary_paper_6_20170323163527913.pdf en English eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/1/2017_Leighton_ISVR24_Plenary_paper_6_20170323163527913.pdf Leighton, Timothy (2017) Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics. 24th International Congress on Sound and Vibration, Park Plaza Westminster Bridge Hotel, London, United Kingdom. 23 - 27 Jul 2017. 16 pp . Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed 2017 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T22:19:07Z Bubbles couple to sound fields to an extraordinary extent, generating and scattering sound, and changing the chemical, physical and biological environments around them when excited to pulsate by an appropriate sound field. This paper accompanies a plenary lecture, opening with the way that the sound emitted by bubbles, when they are injected into the ocean by breaking waves, helps track the >1 billion tonnes of atmospheric carbon that transfers between atmosphere and ocean annually. However, compared to carbon dioxide, atmospheric methane has at least 20 times the ability, per molecule, to generate ‘greenhouse’ warming. Worldwide there is more than twice the amount of carbon trapped in the seabed in the form of methane hydrate than the amount of carbon worldwide in all other known conventional fossil fuels. Acoustics can track the release of bubbles of seabed methane as this hydrate dissociates in response to increasing ocean temperatures, an effect cited by some as a possible climate apocalypse. Continuing the methane theme, this paper discusses the sounds of methane/ethane ‘waterfalls’ on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, before returning to Earth’s oceans to discuss how whales and dolphins might use the interaction between sound and bubbles when hunting. This in turn suggests possibilities for radar in the search for improvised explosive devices. The paper closes with consideration of another apocalypse, discussing the role that bubbles and acoustics have in mitigating the ‘antibiotic apocalypse’, when in response to the increasing use of antimicrobials (antibiotics to combat bacterial infections; anti-virals for viral infections; anti-fungals for fungal infections; and targeted chemicals to combat parasites) the four classes of microbes all naturally evolve resistance, such that by 2050 Anti-Microbial Resistance will be killing more people than cost the world economy more than the current size of the global economy. Conference Object Methane hydrate University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description Bubbles couple to sound fields to an extraordinary extent, generating and scattering sound, and changing the chemical, physical and biological environments around them when excited to pulsate by an appropriate sound field. This paper accompanies a plenary lecture, opening with the way that the sound emitted by bubbles, when they are injected into the ocean by breaking waves, helps track the >1 billion tonnes of atmospheric carbon that transfers between atmosphere and ocean annually. However, compared to carbon dioxide, atmospheric methane has at least 20 times the ability, per molecule, to generate ‘greenhouse’ warming. Worldwide there is more than twice the amount of carbon trapped in the seabed in the form of methane hydrate than the amount of carbon worldwide in all other known conventional fossil fuels. Acoustics can track the release of bubbles of seabed methane as this hydrate dissociates in response to increasing ocean temperatures, an effect cited by some as a possible climate apocalypse. Continuing the methane theme, this paper discusses the sounds of methane/ethane ‘waterfalls’ on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, before returning to Earth’s oceans to discuss how whales and dolphins might use the interaction between sound and bubbles when hunting. This in turn suggests possibilities for radar in the search for improvised explosive devices. The paper closes with consideration of another apocalypse, discussing the role that bubbles and acoustics have in mitigating the ‘antibiotic apocalypse’, when in response to the increasing use of antimicrobials (antibiotics to combat bacterial infections; anti-virals for viral infections; anti-fungals for fungal infections; and targeted chemicals to combat parasites) the four classes of microbes all naturally evolve resistance, such that by 2050 Anti-Microbial Resistance will be killing more people than cost the world economy more than the current size of the global economy.
format Conference Object
author Leighton, Timothy
spellingShingle Leighton, Timothy
Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
author_facet Leighton, Timothy
author_sort Leighton, Timothy
title Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
title_short Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
title_full Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
title_fullStr Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
title_full_unstemmed Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
title_sort climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics
publishDate 2017
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/1/2017_Leighton_ISVR24_Plenary_paper_6_20170323163527913.pdf
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415948/1/2017_Leighton_ISVR24_Plenary_paper_6_20170323163527913.pdf
Leighton, Timothy (2017) Climate change, dolphins, spaceships and antimicrobial resistance: the impact of bubble acoustics. 24th International Congress on Sound and Vibration, Park Plaza Westminster Bridge Hotel, London, United Kingdom. 23 - 27 Jul 2017. 16 pp .
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