Key examples — elasticity and continuum mechanics
Where the chapter’s machinery shows up across the bookshelf.
Example 1: basilar-membrane stiffness gradient and cochlear tonotopy
The basilar membrane spans the cochlea from base to apex, with a stiffness that varies by ~100× over a 35 mm length. Modelled as a damped harmonic oscillator at each position , the local resonant frequency varies by × — covering roughly two decades, almost exactly the audible range. The exact dependence on is approximately exponential (the Greenwood map), giving the tonotopic frequency-place axis of the cochlea. See Hearing Ch 4.2.
Example 2: mechanical impedance of the basilar membrane
For each point on the basilar membrane, the impedance presented to the cochlear fluid is
with the local viscous damping, the (apparent) mass, the stiffness from Example 1. This is the operative complex impedance that enters the cochlear long-wave dispersion relation . See Hearing Ch 4.3.
Example 3: speed of sound in water vs steel
For water: , (no shear elasticity), → .
For steel: , → (P-wave), (S-wave).
Steel is 15× stiffer than water in bulk modulus, but only as fast in sound — because steel is also denser. The competition between stiffness and inertia in is universal across acoustic media. See Sound Ch 4.9.
Example 4: tension–wave on a string and the discrete-to-continuum bridge
The Sound book’s Ch 3 lessons derive the 1-D wave equation by taking the continuum limit of a discrete chain of masses connected by springs. The result is the string-wave equation with — the elasticity-chapter formula in disguise. In string terms, and , recovering .
Example 5: middle-ear ossicles as nearly-rigid levers
The malleus, incus, and stapes are bone — Young’s modulus , much stiffer than the surrounding tissue. To good approximation they are treated as rigid bodies in the mechanics analysis of the middle ear (Hearing Ch 3.3), and the torque-balance + lever-arm argument from the mechanics chapter suffices. Their slight elastic compliance shows up only at very high frequencies (above 4 kHz) as a high-frequency rolloff of middle-ear transmission.
Example 6: bulk modulus of water and the speed of sound
The chapter’s for a fluid is precisely the relation between the molecular bulk modulus computed from the Lennard-Jones potential in the intermolecular-forces chapter and the macroscopic speed of sound. For water, the LJ estimate matches measurement to within a factor of two. This is one of the few “first-principles” predictions in the bookshelf where molecular-scale physics directly determines an observed macroscopic acoustic quantity.
Cross-book backlinks
- Sound Ch 3.1-3.2 — chain to continuum: discrete to wave-equation.
- Sound Ch 4.9 — speed of sound: across fluids and solids.
- Hearing Ch 3.3 — the ossicular solution: nearly-rigid bones.
- Hearing Ch 4.2 — stiffness gradient: basilar-membrane elasticity.
- Hearing Ch 4.3 — traveling wave: mechanical-impedance derivation.
- Cavitation Ch 1.1 — water’s bulk modulus: K for liquid water.