## acoostics.jpg The image is a two-panel educational diagram comparing how sound travels from a musician on stage versus a pigeon on stage in an auditorium. **Top Panel:** - The top panel shows a silhouette of a person standing on a stage, representing a musician. There are lines drawn to indicate the direction and path of sound waves as they travel outward from the musician. - These lines show how the sound bounces off the walls of the auditorium, creating an effect that surrounds the audience with the music. **Bottom Panel:** - The bottom panel shows another silhouette on a stage, this time representing a pigeon. Similar to the top panel, there are lines indicating the direction and path of sound waves. - However, these lines show that the sound from the pigeon does not bounce off the walls in the same way as it would with a musician. Instead, they appear to be more direct and do not spread out or surround the audience effectively. **Text:** - The text at the bottom of each panel provides an explanation: - "The sound from a musician on stage bounces off the auditorium walls to surround the audience." - "The sound from a pigeon on stage does not do this. The reason is a coo sticks." This diagram uses simple silhouettes and lines to illustrate how different sounds can travel differently in an enclosed space, highlighting the difference between human speech (or music) and bird calls like those of a pigeon. This description was generated automatically from image files by a local LLM, and thus, may not be fully accurate. Please feel free to ask questions if you have further questions about the nature of the image or its meaning within the presentation.