Why Does Helium Make Our Voice Sound Funny?
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Ever heard someone talk after a helium balloon and suddenly sound like a tiny squeaky mouse? There's real science behind it... and it's weirder than you think.
In this episode of Why Though?, Dr Matt Agnew investigates the helium voice mystery. Why do balloons float? Why does sound travel faster through helium? And how does all of that flip a normal voice into instant chipmunk mode? Plus we find out about a super-heavy gas that does the exact opposite... making voices go deep and booming.
What you'll learn:
- Helium is less dense than air... that's why balloons float
- Your vocal cords and throat work together to shape sound
- Sound travels faster through helium, which shifts the way your voice sounds
- Your brain hears those shifted sounds as higher and squeakier
- Scientists call the frequencies that shape your voice formants... helium scrambles them
Key Science Ideas: states of matter, density, vocal cords, resonance, formants.
Fun Experiment: Hum "mmmm" with your mouth closed then slowly open it wider. Hear the change? That's resonance in action... same science, no gas required.
Why Though? The show for little scientists who love asking big questions. Follow or subscribe so you never miss an episode.
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