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Sneakers on the Court: Why They Sound and What It Means
USA, BostonWednesday, February 25, 2026
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The sound that rings out when a player slides on a hardwood floor is not just noise; it’s the result of tiny, rapid changes happening inside the shoe.
A Harvard scientist studied this phenomenon by sliding sneakers over a glass surface, recording the sounds with a microphone and capturing the motion with a high‑speed camera. The data revealed that parts of the sole repeatedly lose and regain contact with the floor thousands of times each second. These rapid shifts create ripples that travel fast across the shoe’s surface, producing a high‑pitched squeak.
The Role of Sole Design
- Smooth rubber blocks: Chaotic ripples, no distinct squeak.
- Real shoe soles with ridges and grooves: Organize the ripples, making them repeat in a way that produces a clear sound.
This new insight connects the frequency of these fast pulses with the audible squeak for the first time.
Broader Implications
- Geology: Modeling how Earth’s tectonic plates slide, potentially improving earthquake predictions or reducing wear in mechanical systems.
- Manufacturing: Adjusting rubber thickness could shift the squeak’s pitch or eliminate it altogether.
Practical Takeaways
- No quick fix is offered—common home remedies like soap or dryer sheets can be risky.
- The study opens the door to designing shoes that either produce a pleasant squeak or silence it entirely.
- Future research may let designers tune the sound to be barely audible or a distinct feature of athletic footwear.
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