The comments are interesting. The one that got me thinking was this:

"Rectification is like a diode. If the next step was a transistor, then
you could have sound driven computing."

Hm. I wonder what truly novel stuff one could do with that.

Udhay

http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=physics-tricks-could-make-for-one-w-2011-04-27

Physics tricks could make for one-way soundproofing

By John Matson | Apr 27, 2011 06:27 PM | 6

Microphone in a soundboothOne-way mirrors, which many of us know from
watching police procedurals on TV, seem a bit magical—how does the
mirror know which light to let through and which to reflect? The truth
is, it doesn't. The one-way mirror and its smaller cousin, the mirrored
sunglass lens, rely on lighting imbalances for efficacy. If the cops
behind the one-way mirror were as brightly lit as the interrogation
room, the suspect would be able to see them just fine.

But materials that genuinely discriminate between the direction of light
or sound might be possible, according to a new study. That could make
for true one-way mirrors or for directional soundproofing—imagine, for
instance, a wall through which sound can enter but not escape.

Stefano Lepri of the Italian National Research Council and Giulio Casati
of the University of Insubria in Italy and the National University of
Singapore have worked out the theoretical groundwork for materials that
transmit waves in an asymmetric way, which they report in the April 22
issue of Physical Review Letters.

Their proposal relies on the use of nonlinear materials, in which the
response of the material depends on the attributes of the wave passing
through it. "When you introduce nonlinear interactions and forces, many
of the intuitions we have are no longer valid," Lepri told Physical
Review Focus, an American Physical Society publication that highlights
studies from affiliated journals and explains them to a wider audience.
"We can use this nonlinear interaction to break this fundamental result
of reciprocity theory," which demands that all waves get the same
transmission treatment regardless of the direction from which they arrive.

By stacking layers of nonlinear materials along with ordinary linear
layers in an asymmetric fashion, the researchers have calculated, a wave
would be able to pass through in one direction but would almost
completely bounce off when it arrives from the other direction. The
one-way bias isn't universal, however—the researchers note that each
particular implementation would have a sweet spot of wave amplitudes and
frequencies for which it would work best.

So far, the finding is based only on numerical simulations rather than
laboratory experiments. But if those simulations prove to be a good
approximation of real materials, the researchers report, the "results
may open the way to novel strategies to control and optimize wave
propagation and to design devices for sound or light rectification."

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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