Date: June 4, 2019
Source: Virginia Tech
Anybody
who has been passed by an ambulance at high speed has experienced a physical
effect called the Doppler shift: As the ambulance moves toward the listener, its
motion compresses the siren's sound waves and raises the sound pitch. As the
ambulance moves away from the listener, the sound waves get dilated and the
pitch is lowered. A listener wearing a blindfold could use this Doppler shift
pattern to track the motion of the ambulance.
In a
paper published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
the authors, Rolf Mueller, professor of mechanical engineering in the College
of Engineering, and his doctoral student, Xiaoyan Yin, demonstrate that the ears
of bats come with a "built-in ambulance" that creates the same
physical effect. Yin and Mueller think the study of ear-generated Doppler
shifts in bat biosonar could give rise to new sensory principles that could
enable small, yet powerful sensors. An example of this type of sensor would be
for drones that can operate in dense foliage or autonomous underwater vehicles
navigating near complex underwater structures.
"The
animals move their ears fast enough so that sound waves that impinge on the
ears are transformed by the motion of the ear surfaces and shifted to higher or
lower frequencies," said Mueller. "In fact, the bat species studied
(horseshoe bats and Old World Roundleaf bats) can move their ears so fast that
Doppler shifts of around 350 Hz can be created. This is about seven times
larger than the smallest Doppler shift the animals haven been shown to be able
to detect."
Doppler
shifts have long been known to play an important role in the biosonar system of
bats such as the species studied by Mueller and Yin. The bats have the enviable
ability to hunt in very dense vegetation, but to accomplish this, they have to
solve the problem of how to distinguish a moth, their preferred prey, from
hundreds of leaves that surround it.
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