Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
In a memoir published some years ago by Helmholtz (Crelle, Bd. LVII.) it was proved that if a uniform frictionless gaseous medium be thrown into vibration by a simple source of sound of given period and intensity, the variation of pressure is the same at any point B when the source of sound is at A as it would have been at A had the source of sound been situated at B, and that this law is not interfered with by the presence of any number of fixed solid obstacles on which the sound may impinge.
A simple source of sound is a point at which the condition of continuity of the fluid is broken by an alternate introduction and abstraction of fluid, given in amount and periodic according to the harmonic law.
The reciprocal property is capable of generalization so as to apply to all acoustical systems whatever capable of vibrating about a configuration of equilibrium, as I proved in the Proceedings of the Mathematical Society for June 1873 [Art. xxi.], and is not lost even when the systems are subject to damping, provided that the frictional forces vary as the first power of the velocity, as must always be the case when the motion is small enough. Thus Helmholtz's theorem may be extended to the case when the medium is not uniform, and when the obstacles are of such a character that they share the vibration.
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