ultrasound
Any sound with a frequency above 20,000 Hz or 20 kHz that is, above the highest audible frequencyis defined to be ultrasound. In practice, it is possible to create ultrasound frequencies up to more than a gigahertz. Higher frequencies are difficult to create; furthermore, they propagate poorly because they are very strongly absorbed. Ultrasound has a tremendous number of applications, which range from burglar alarms to use in cleaning delicate objects to the guidance systems of bats. We begin our discussion of ultrasound with some of its applications in medicine, in which it is used extensively both for diagnosis and for therapy. Characteristics of Ultrasound The characteristics of ultrasound, such as frequency and intensity, are wave properties common to all types of waves. Ultrasound also has a wavelength that limits the fineness of detail it can detect. This characteristic is true of all waves. We can never observe details significantly smaller than the wavelength of our probe; for example, we will never see individual atoms with visible light, because the atoms are so small compared with the wavelength of light.