ASSAP logo Paranormal sounds
Bookmark and Share

Ghostly sounds
A sound is produced by a source (S) in one room and heard next door (L). Where does the sound from S appear to come from to listener L? There is sound reflected from a wall (R), diffracted sound (which goes around the wall) through the doorway (D) and attenuated sound through the wall (T).

Investigation technique pages
Analysing cold spots
Doors that open by themselves
The 'new house effect'
Vigils in the dark?
Why use science?
What approach to investigation?
Paranormal words
What is a haunted place?
Paranormal activity or nature?
Is my house haunted?
Science applied to paranormal
Geology and ghosts
Paranormal & science theories
Geomagnetism in the paranormal
Using people on vigils
Science for investigators
Paranormal sounds
Recording EVP
Evidence is everything!

Groans and moans

Groaning noises are often caused by the wind. It can enter hollows or holes in buildings or natural features (like rock formations or trees) and sometimes produce odd noises. It works like a wind instrument, such as a flute. The wind may need to be a specific direction for such sounds to occur. Therefore, the weird noises may be intermittent, so it may not always be picked up on a single vigil.

Some hear it, some don't!

On vigils, sometimes some people hear a sound and others don't! It might be paranormal or the Cocktail Party Effect.

   

Sound anomalies

The sound we hear is a movement in air - a compression wave in fact. Sound can also traverse other materials. Just as with light, sound diminishes with distance from its source and is absorbed or reflected by any materials in the way. However, unlike light, air carries sound whereas with light it merely gets in the way. This is important but disturbances to the air (such as winds) can distort and modify sound in a way that would leave light largely unaffected.

Sound is heard better downwind of a source than upwind. This is not because the air is 'carrying' the sound, rather it is a wind shear effect. Sound will also carry longer distances when there is a temperature inversion in the atmosphere (with higher temperatures above the ground). With gusty wind, sounds from a long way off may be fragmented and appear to come and go (like bits of EVP).

One strange aspect of sound propagation concerns very loud noises, like those from explosions. They may be heard for a long distance (kilometres) but there can be a circle of silence some way out where nothing is heard, even though the sound is audible further away. This effect is caused by the sound being reflected back from air layers high in the atmosphere. It could explain some anomalous sounds which cover a wide area and appear to have no obvious source.

Ghostly footsteps

Perhaps the most common reports of paranormal sounds are ghostly footsteps and 'someone moving around' in an empty room. These are both simple sounds which could be misinterpretations of mundane phenomena partly absorbed by intervening walls. They may be assigned to the wrong room because listeners' direction finding is impaired by frequency shifts (see left).
© Maurice Townsend 2009