Geometric Perturbation Theory and Acoustic Boundary Condition Dynamics
David T. Heider, J. Leo van Hemmen

TL;DR
This paper applies geometric perturbation theory to model the acoustic boundary condition dynamics in the 3D wave equation, specifically focusing on the coupled eardrum and internal cavity system in animals with ICE, revealing detailed relaxation and asymptotic behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of time-dependent perturbation theory to the coupled eardrum-internal cavity system, deriving explicit relaxation dynamics and asymptotic states.
Findings
Explicit first-order relaxation dynamics of eardrum system
Derivation of initial and quasi-stationary states
Framework for geometric perturbation theory with boundary-driven manifolds
Abstract
Geometric perturbation theory is universal. A typical example is provided by the 3D wave equation, widely used in acoustics. We face vibrating eardrums as a binaural auditory input stemming from an external sound source. In the setup of internally coupled ears (ICE), which are present in more than half of the land-living vertebrates, the two tympana are coupled by an internal air-filled cavity, whose geometry determines the acoustic properties of the ICE system. The eardrums themselves are described by a 2-dimensional, damped, wave equation and are part of the spatial boundary conditions of the three-dimensional Laplacian belonging to the wave equation in the internal cavity that couples and internally drives the eardrums. In animals with ICE the resulting signal is the superposition of external sound arriving at both eardrums and the internal pressure coupling them. This is also the…
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