Can You Really Break A Glass By Screaming?

Table of Contents (click to expand)

Yes, it is possible to break a glass by screaming, but the singer has to be well-trained and incredibly lucky.

You wouldn’t believe all that can be achieved today using technology, especially in movies! You can see the Hulk smashing through buildings and fighting bad guys from all over the galaxy, Neo escaping every bullet fired at him with a perfect backward bend, and plenty of other unbelievable things that seem impossible to normal people.

There is one particular thing that you’ve probably seen many times in movies, plays, or TV shows; a female (usually an opera singer) screams or sings so loud that glasses in her vicinity begin to shatter.

As dramatic as it seems, is it really possible to shatter glasses just by shrieking at a high pitch?


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Sound Waves

Just like electricity, sound is also a form of energy. It travels through various substances in waves. When a sound wave comes in contact with a certain object, it excites the particles present in that object, causing its particles to vibrate against themselves. This is how a sound wave and the particles of an object interact when they come in contact.

sound waves
Sound waves of different frquencies and intensities (Credits: microvector/Shutterstock)

Also Read: Why Do Certain Sounds Make Our Skin Crawl?

Resonant Frequency

The number of waves passing through a single point over the duration of 1 second is called frequency. It is measured in Hertz. Every material has a certain resonant frequency (or natural frequency) at which its own particles vibrate. For a wave to cause vibrations, its frequency should fall in the range of the resonant frequency of the object. For instance, if playing loud music on your speakers makes the plaster of your room shake and peel off, then it means that the sound waves emitted by the speakers falls somewhere in the resonant frequency range of the plaster.

The Case Of Shattering Glass

In order to break a glass with nothing but a human voice, you have to look at a few important factors. First, to shatter glass, the frequency of waves should be around 550 Hertz. Therefore, the person in charge of shattering the glass has to make sure that their voice can attain a frequency in that range.

man screaming
You’ll have to scream really loud (Credits: luxorphoto/Shutterstock)

Another important factor is the loudness or intensity of the sound wave. The sound should be extremely loud, so that it carries sufficient energy to vibrate the glass particles in a powerful way. An untrained human voice, generally, does not that have that much intensity, which means that you’ll have to use artificial methods (using electronic equipment) to amp up the voice’s intensity to the necessary level.

An empty glass will also be easier to shatter than a glass filled with wine or water. Furthermore, minor defects in the structure of the glass can also help to shatter it more easily, as these defects provide ideal weak spots.

So, breaking a glass just by human voice IS possible, but the singer has to be well-trained and incredibly lucky. Mythbusters, a popular TV show on Discovery, proved that breaking a glass in this way is actually possible.

After hearing all of that, I shouldn’t have to tell you this, but don’t hold a glass in front of your face and try to shatter it just by the force of your voice. It simply wouldn’t work, and if it ever did, you’d have a glass shattering inches from your face. That’s what I call a lose-lose situation!

Also Read: Why Do Glass Windows Break During Fires?

References (click to expand)
  1. Fact or Fiction?: An Opera Singer's Piercing Voice Can Shatter .... Scientific American
  2. Voice/Glass | MythBusters | Discovery - www.discovery.com:80
  3. Can a human singing voice shatter glass? - EarthSky. earthsky.org
About the Author

Ashish is a Science graduate (Bachelor of Science) from Punjabi University (India). He spearheads the content and editorial wing of ScienceABC and manages its official Youtube channel. He’s a Harry Potter fan and tries, in vain, to use spells and charms (Accio! [insert object name]) in real life to get things done. He totally gets why JRR Tolkien would create, from scratch, a language spoken by elves, and tries to bring the same passion in everything he does. A big admirer of Richard Feynman and Nikola Tesla, he obsesses over how thoroughly science dictates every aspect of life… in this universe, at least.

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