Hum in the Air

  • #1
Vanadium 50
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Can someone help me understand a hum I heard?
Last night I head a very odd hum. I believe it was atmospheric, but did not see the source.
  • It was at 10PM
  • It came from the north. It did not noticeably move.
  • It was about 250 Hz.
  • It was not a perfect sine wave - there was some distortion. More or less like an engine.
  • It lasted about 4 minutes.
  • The frequency never changed - i.e. no Doppler effect. Not an engine revving either.
  • The amplitude fluctuated by about 10 dB, irregularly, but with a period of 5 to 10 seconds.
  • Weather was partly cloudy. Air was cool and dry.
I would have guessed a plane except for the lack of frequency shift. I am wondering, could it be very far away, and the sound been channeled through some sort of atmospheric ducting? VHF radio does this sometimes. Could it be some resonance excited by a broadband noise source? Something else?
 
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  • #3
fresh_42 said:
My first thought was a defective starter in a fluorescent tube or some other coil.
Interesting, as I do have one. However, it's in the other side of the house. The sound appeared to be coming from outside.

Most outdoor lighting is either gaslamps or LEDs. Winter is too cold for CFL's.

And yes, I went to that link and it was definitely close to 250 Hz.
 
  • #4
If there is a rail line within 10 km, heavy diesel engine(s), starting to move a train.
 
  • #5
Vanadium 50 said:
Interesting, as I do have one. However, it's in the other side of the house. The sound appeared to be coming from outside.
Having tried to triangulate odd sounds both indoors and out, it can sometimes be deceptive where it’s coming from, especially if you don’t have multiple chances or an extended period to triangulate it.

Has it ever happened before, or was this a freak/unique occurrence?
 
  • #6
Baluncore said:
If there is a rail line within 10 km, heavy diesel engine(s), starting to move a train.
Interesting. There is a line about a mile away. It is mostly commuter, but there is some freight. And trains do stop there - it is one of the longest segments between at-grade crossings.

However, why wouldn't I have heard the pitch change as the train's velocity changed?

Flyboy said:
Has it ever happened before, or was this a freak/unique occurrence?
First time I noticed. However, last night there was a similar sound, only with Doppler, and it was a plane.
 
  • #7
Could it have been a generator? Maybe one of those road-side construction types?

A crew rolls up to fix some part of the highway, erects a set of lights powered by a diesel generator, gone in a few minutes.

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  • #8
DaveC426913 said:
Could it have been a generator?
Maybe. Four minutes at night? Kind of an odd time for it, but it could be.
 
  • #9
Vanadium 50 said:
Maybe. Four minutes at night? Kind of an odd time for it, but it could be.
This wouldn't be scheduled work; it would be a reported incident.

Some hazard on the road is reported by a motorist - downed branch, flotsam or roadkill. A highway crew shows up, fires up their diesel-powered god lamps, clears the obstruction off the road in ten minutes, and then spends two hours filling out reports.
 

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