The characteristic sound accompanying footsteps on the snow cover in cold weather is not just background acoustics, but a complex physical phenomenon related to the mechanical destruction of the ice matrix and the generation of sound waves in a wide frequency range. The crunch of snow is a kind of acoustic thermometer and an indicator of its structural properties.
The crunch occurs at the moment of deformation and destruction of the snow cover under load (footstep, ski, tire). This is a multistage process:
Plastic deformation and brittle fracture. The snow cover is a porous medium consisting of ice crystals (snowflakes) and grains connected by snow bridges (fusing bonds). At a temperature close to 0°C, these bonds are relatively plastic, crystals can deform and slide against each other almost silently. However, with a decrease in temperature, ice becomes brittle, and the bonds between the crystals become rigid.
Mechanism of "microexplosions".
Under the pressure of the foot, the sharp tips of the crystals concentrate stress at points of contact.
Instant brittle fracture (scaling) of these tips and snow bridges occurs.
The released elastic energy causes microvibrations of the separated fragments and the entire ice lattice. These microvibrations are the primary source of sound. Acoustic studies have shown that one step causes the destruction of hundreds of thousands of such microcontacts.
The role of temperature. Temperature is a key factor determining the character of the sound. This is due to the fundamental property of ice: with a decrease in temperature, its brittleness and Young's modulus (a measure of stiffness) increase. More rigid and brittle ice generates sound waves of greater amplitude and higher frequency when destroyed.
Observations and experiments (including those conducted in the Soviet Union at the Institute of Earth Physics) have allowed to derive an empirical dependence:
From 0°C to -6°C: The crunch is practically absent. The dominant is a dull crackling or rustling associated with plastic deformation and friction of wet crystals.
From -6°C to -15°C: Low-frequency crunch appears and strengthens. The sound is relatively soft, "dull". Destruction occurs mainly along the boundaries of larger snow grains.
Below -15°C: The crunch becomes high-frequency, clear and sharp. At temperatures around -30°C and below, it resembles the sound of crushed polystyrene or a high ring. This is due to the fact that not only the bonds between the grains, but also the ice crystals themselves are destroyed, which behave like glass in extreme cold.
Thus, an experienced observer can approximately estimate the air temperature by the tone of the snow crunch.
The character of the sound depends not only on temperature, but also on the structure of the snow, which is determined by its deposition and metamorphism history:
New, fluffy snow ("puff"): Consists of complex star-shaped crystals with many rays. When compressed, they break at multiple points, creating a more "soft", muffled sound even in the cold.
Old, firnified snow: Undergone multiple processes of melting and freezing, consists of large, rounded ice grains. When walking, such grains mainly roll and rub against each other, generating a lower frequency grating or crackling.
Glaze (snow crust): Forms when the surface melts and refreezes. When the glaze breaks, a dull thud is first heard, followed by a clear crunch of the underlying cold layers.
The crunch of snow is the subject of study in snow science (snow science) and physical acoustics. Research includes:
Recording sound in controlled conditions using highly sensitive microphones and piezodetectors contacting the snow.
Analysis of the spectrum (distribution of energy by frequencies). It has been established that the crunch of snow is a broadband noise signal with energy maxima in certain frequency bands (usually in the range of 500-2000 Hz), which shift towards higher frequencies with decreasing temperature.
Synchronous registration of sound and snow deformation for correlation of acoustic spikes with destruction acts.
Arctic and Antarctic observations: Polar explorers note that in conditions of extreme cold (below -50°C), the crunch of snow becomes so sharp and loud that it can be heard hundreds of meters away in calm weather. This sound was considered one of the signs of the onset of "weather silence" — a period of severe frost.
Snow and war: During the Winter War (1939-1940) and the Great Patriotic War, the loud crunch of snow in severe cold represented a tactical problem: it demasked scouts and the movement of infantry. Soldiers learned to walk in a special, smooth gait to minimize the sound.
Martian snow: On Mars, there is snow of solid carbon dioxide (dry ice). Its physical properties are different. Theoretically, when Martian snow is destroyed, sound should also occur, but due to the extremely rarefied atmosphere (pressure of about 1% of Earth's), it would be extremely weak and have completely different spectral characteristics. Microphones of rovers have not yet recorded such phenomena.
The crunch of snow is not just a physical process, but a powerful sensory marker deeply rooted in the cultural code of peoples living in snowy regions. In literature (from Russian classics to Scandinavian detective novels), it often acts as a symbol of cold, loneliness, purity, or anxiety. Its psychoacoustic effect is related to the fact that this is one of the few sounds in nature that humans create with their movement, entering into direct contact with the element, and which at the same time unambiguously indicates specific weather conditions.
The crunch of snow is an acoustic calling card of winter nature, the result of the collective brittle destruction of myriad ice crystals. Its study lies at the intersection of mechanics, materials science, and acoustics, providing scientists with data on the rheological properties of snow. For an ordinary person, this is an intuitively understandable indicator of frost and the structure of the snow cover, as well as one of the most recognizable and emotionally charged sounds of the winter landscape. This phenomenon reminds us that even such a seemingly simple and everyday thing as steps on the snow hides a complex and elegant physics of the interaction of matter, energy, and sound.
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