Bats Knows The Speed Of Sound From Birth And Can Tell Position In Time Not Space
Credit: m.dw.com
Most of us are aware of the fact that bats uses what is called ''echolocation" to navigate and hunt their preys, but there appears to be more to this echolocation than was originally thought. It was recently discovered by scientists at the Tel Aviv University, Israel that bats already knew the speed of sound from birth and that unlike humans who map the world through units of distance, bats map the world through units of time. If we humans for example, observes an insect to be at a distance of one and a half meters (1.5m) from a particular bat, then the bat would observe that insect to be at a distance of approximately nine milliseconds (hint: t = 2v/s , where t = time, v = speed of sound at normal condition and s = distance).
Part credit: Justin Reed
To find out how this was discovered and more, .....Read more.
You can't post same content in different communities.
Nice to read your post .
Keep posting and stay with our community .
Thank you
Hi @clinton21, please can you not duplicate content across communities as this is considered to be spamming. Thank you.
Alright, already noted