I recently wrote a post on my blog about a fairly esoteric idea regarding sound propagating through light. This inspired me to write an article about the more down-to-Earth interactions between light and sound. Light is a transverse electromagnetic wave and sound is a longitudinal density wave through a medium, and it’s generally taught that they are Two Different Things. However, there are a few effects that involve their interaction. I will discuss three effects with similar sounding names: the photoacoustic effect, the acousto-optic effect, and sonoluminescence, as well as the general quantum treatment of sound-light interactions.

The Photoacoustic Effect

The photoacoustic effect, from the Greek word for light and the Greek for for hearing, is a sound emission that originates from a change in density induced by light. A typical example involves a block of stuff that you blast with a laser. The laser blast causes the stuff to rapidly heat up and expand, and that expansion causes sound waves to propagate through the medium surrounding the stuff. There are other mechanisms that don’t involve thermal expansion, but this one is the most ubiquitous. The photoacoustic effect was discovered by Alexander Graham Bell, who was experimenting with ways to transmit sound over long distances (the telephone of course being his most famous invention).

One of the applications of this effect is photoacoustic imaging, a biomedical imaging technique that involves blasting tissue with a laser and then detecting the sound waves with a piezoelectric ultrasound transducer. It can be advantageous over pure ultrasound imaging because the laser pulse overcomes limitations involving the propagation of sound through tissue (although now you have issues involving light propagation). One of the reasons this might be useful is because tumors tend to have different elastic and thermal properties compared to regular tissue (cancer cells are generally squishier, for instance), so both the absorption of the light and the propagation of the sound would help pinpoint the presence of a tumor. Looking through the recently literature on the topic, it appears that photoacoustics are rarely used by themselves, but in tandem with other modalities such as MRI or fluorescence imaging, to get an overall better picture of what’s happening inside the body.

The Acousto-Optic Effect

The acousto-optic effect, combining the Greek roots for hearing and seeing, is the scattering of light due to a change in the index of refraction of a material that arises as a sound wave passes through and changes the density. Because the change in density from the sound wave is periodic, the light essentially experiences a diffraction grating, with bands of light going off at different angles from the region of the density wave. This was predicted by Brillouin in the 1920s and observed experimentally by Debye and others in the 1930s.

There is a technology called an acousto-optic tunable filter (AOTF), also known as an acousto-optic modulator. It involves a transducer and an acoustic absorber on opposite sides of a quartz lens, creating a standing wave within the lens, that can be modulated by changing the waveform coming from the transducer. As light passes through the lens (let’s say as part of a microscope), the user can dynamically move the focus by tuning the standing wave in the glass, or even have multiple foci. When the lens is used for optical tweezers (trapping an object at a laser’s focus with electromagnetic forces), an AOTF can be used to move the focus, and therefore the trapped object. Below is a video of some Finns using this to control four beads and have them dance around at will.

Sonoluminescence

Sonoluminescence, from the Latin for sound and light, is a phenomenon that involves a collapsing bubble emitting a flash of light. I used to be a bubble scientist so this is one of my favorite effects; I have written about it before on PhysicsForums and on my blog. Sound waves, when applied to a bubbly fluid, cause the bubbles to expand and contract due to the changes in the gas pressure inside the bubbles. If the bubbles contract by an extreme amount (due to either the applied sound field of just because they’re unstably large), almost down to a point, a powerful shock wave and a flash of light are released. This was discovered by accident in 1934, when two German scientists were attempt to use ultrasound to make photographs develop faster. They noticed random spots of light appearing on their photographs, and eventually it was concluded that the light arose from the collapsing bubbles. I have written quite a bit about this in my other article, so I won’t add much more, but I will just mention that this is considered a sound-light interaction because the light is created after the application of sound waves to the fluid.

Photon-Phonon Interactions

Solid-state physics was never my strong suit, but I will briefly mention some sound-light interactions that occur on the quantum level in crystals. Electromagnetic waves can be treated in terms of discrete photons, and likewise acoustic waves can be treated as phonons, which are discrete vibrations of a crystal lattice. Both of these have their own ways of propagating through a crystal, and they can interact and scatter off one another. Many of the effects that occur are quantum versions of some of the aforementioned, including Brillouin scattering, which involves a photon being scattered as it interacts with a phonon. Processes like Raman scattering involve a photon exciting an atom in a material, which reduces its excited energy by emitting phonons, so that when it relaxes back to its ground state, the emitted photon is of lower energy. These interactions contribute to the overall refractive index of a material, which ZapperZ comments on here.

Conclusion

I don’t expect the information in this article to blow anyone’s mind, but these are interesting and occasionally effects and those interested in physics in general may be keen to learn more about sound-light interaction.