demonstrations:breaking_glass_with_sound
Breaking Glass with Sound
Materials: ★★★ Requires materials not commonly found in school laboratories
Difficulty: ★★★ Requires a more experienced teacher
Safety: ★★★ Only to be attempted with adequate safety procedures and trained staff
Categories: Electromagnetic Spectrum and Waves, Sound, Science Shows
Alternative titles: Resonance and Glass Shattering
Summary
A thin-walled wine glass can be shattered by sound if it is exposed to a tone at its natural resonant frequency. When the sound drives the glass strongly enough, vibrations build until the glass breaks.
Procedure
- Select a large wine glass with thin walls and a clear, ringing resonance when tapped.
- Identify its resonant frequency by gently tapping and listening for the pitch.
- Position the glass in front of a strong sound source such as a compression driver and amplifier.
- Play a pure tone that matches the glass’s resonance, starting at low volume and increasing gradually.
- Use a visual aid (such as a small piece of paper leaning against the rim) to confirm vibration.
- Adjust frequency slightly lower than the tap-test pitch, since resonance shifts as vibration increases.
- With sufficient power and resonance, the glass will shatter.
Links
A MythBuster's Glass Shattering Montage - Jaime Vendera:
📄 How to breaking glass with sound - SalfordAcoustic: https://salfordacoustics.co.uk/how-to-breaking-glass-with-sound
Variations
- Instead of a loudspeaker, use a trained singer who can hold a steady pitch near the glass’s resonance, but still amplify electronically for safety and consistency.
- Try glasses of different shapes and thicknesses to compare resonance strength.
- Use high-speed video to capture the moment the glass deforms and breaks.
- Explore safe demonstrations of resonance using vibrating plates or tuning forks if breaking glass is impractical.
Safety Precautions
- Only attempt with proper equipment and training; not suitable as a casual classroom experiment.
- All nearby observers must wear safety goggles and hearing protection.
- Keep a safe distance; broken shards can scatter further than expected.
- Do not attempt by holding a glass near the mouth — dangerous if glass shatters unexpectedly.
- Secure the glass in place so that fragments do not travel toward the audience.
Questions to Consider
- Why does the glass break only at its resonant frequency? (Because resonance amplifies vibration amplitude until the glass structure fails.)
- Why is a thin-walled wine glass preferred? (It has lower damping and stronger resonance, making it easier to vibrate.)
- What real-world systems must engineers design to avoid resonance damage? (Bridges, skyscrapers, aircraft, and machinery must all avoid destructive resonance.)
- How does this connect to the concept of simple harmonic motion? (Resonance occurs when external driving frequency matches the system’s natural frequency, maximizing oscillation amplitude.)