Bro you disliked my comment for no reason and tried to beat me down with your IQ. I shouldn't have called you a tool but Your arrogance was very irritating to me. apologies for that but i still think your ass is wrong, however i should have worded it differently. Saying ''triangulate'' was the wrong word, what i meant was sound travels at 1100ft per second? so the first bit of sound you hear would give you a good idea of how far away the explosion was. that is all i meant, your over here dissecting the shit out of my comment but i get it, you got a big brain and all. I hope you have a great day brother, life is good!
That's okay. I have a thick skin. But when you are in what amount to acoustic "canyons", you have no assurance that the first sound is even audible. I gave you a live example of that, which you seem to think means nothing. The issue is not I.Q. It has to do with perception of sound direction. There is also the problem that long-distance propagation of high-amplitude sound waves leads to "crackling" due to non-linear effects (which is why rocket launches sound the way they do at a distance). But, hey, if someone has the sound signals and the locations, it would be interesting to see what they deduce.
Bro you disliked my comment for no reason and tried to beat me down with your IQ. I shouldn't have called you a tool but Your arrogance was very irritating to me. apologies for that but i still think your ass is wrong, however i should have worded it differently. Saying ''triangulate'' was the wrong word, what i meant was sound travels at 1100ft per second? so the first bit of sound you hear would give you a good idea of how far away the explosion was. that is all i meant, your over here dissecting the shit out of my comment but i get it, you got a big brain and all. I hope you have a great day brother, life is good!
That's okay. I have a thick skin. But when you are in what amount to acoustic "canyons", you have no assurance that the first sound is even audible. I gave you a live example of that, which you seem to think means nothing. The issue is not I.Q. It has to do with perception of sound direction. There is also the problem that long-distance propagation of high-amplitude sound waves leads to "crackling" due to non-linear effects (which is why rocket launches sound the way they do at a distance). But, hey, if someone has the sound signals and the locations, it would be interesting to see what they deduce.