Summary: | Photoacoustic excitation of a fluid sphere generates an outgoing ultrasonic wave whose time profile permits determination of the density, sound speed, and diameter of the sphere. Experiments with pulsed laser beams have confirmed the major predictions of existing theory. With regard to acoustic waves generated within spheres, although mathematical expressions for their properties are known, virtually no exploration of the waveforms in theory or experiment has taken place. Here, two cases for photoacoustic excitation of a droplet are discussed: first, absorption of radiation in a region of fluid external to the droplet, and, second, absorption of radiation by the droplet itself. Large amplitude transients, compressions in the former and rarefactions in the latter, are generated as the waves approach the center of the sphere. The high amplitudes of the waves suggest shock wave formation.
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