In his article on the evolution and history of noise (Physics Today, February 2020, page 42), Roland Wittje mentions in passing physicists, including Nobel laureates, involved in acoustics during World War I. What he did not mention was the essential work of James Lighthill (1924–98) during the 1950s. After Lord Rayleigh’s monumental contributions in his two-volume work The Theory of Sound, Lighthill’s development of aeroacoustics1 is considered some of the most important work in the field; he defined the source of sound and especially illuminated the issue of noise reduction. (See Lighthill’s obituary in Physics Today, March 1999, page 104.)
Reference
1.
M. J.
Lighthill
, Proc. R. Soc. London A
211
, 564
(1952
); M. J.
Lighthill
, Proc. R. Soc. London A
222
, 1
(1954
). 2.
R.
Wittje
, Physics Today
73
(2
), 42
(2020
). 3.
D.
Crighton
, Physics Today
52
(3
), 104
(1999
). © 2020 American Institute of Physics.
2020
American Institute of Physics