The Sound of Bacteria

They’ve figured out how to listen to bacteria.

Alexander Ohlinger et al. at the Ludwig Maximilian Universitiy in Munich have constructed a highly sensitive sound collecting device using a gold nanoparticle confined in an optical trap. This trap acts like a pair of tweezers for sound waves traveling in a liquid medium. Apparently this nanoparticle setup can detect sounds down to  -60dB. The lowest sound a human can hear is around 0dB. The loudest we hear without pain is 120dB. To give you an idea of these numbers, according to WorsleySchool.net, a human whisper is about 20dB. A power saw is about 110dB.

It’s hard to imagine -60dB, but I hope they are able to do this. I’d love to hear what a bacterium sounds like as it’s shuffling around the miasma.

Sue Lange

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Comments

  • Widdershins  On January 25, 2012 at 5:20 pm

    I wonder … this could be useful … how?

  • suelange  On January 26, 2012 at 12:32 pm

    Are you kidding? Remember the whale recordings? Oh this is going to be big. Wait ’til it gets to vinyl. Top 40s. Number one with a bullet. Yup!

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