Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2008
The intensity of stifling is estimated. Under ideal conditions the absorption should vary as the secant of the angle of incidence of the sound.
* Reported by Heyl, , Chrisler, and Snyder, in Journ. Washington Acad., Report of Phil. Soc. 10 23, 1929.Google Scholar
† Trans. Camb. Phil. Soc. 6 (1837), 403–413: Math. Papers, pp. 232–42.Google Scholar
* Cf. Rayleigh's, posthumous discussion of selective reflection, owing to surface cavities, Scientific Papers, Vol. VI, pp. 662–9. The explanation of stifling of sound, explored technically by Sabine, was first given by Rayleigh, for direct incidence, in Theory of Sound, Vol. II (1896), §§350–1.Google Scholar