For the purposes of any discussion we could have on this particular problem, any laws of physics needed to derive any physical model of such systems can be derived from
E = mc[sup]2[/sup] where E is energy, m = mass, and c = speed of light.
But the devil is in the details, and there are a
lot of details involved in figuring out how to analyze any given physical situation and get answers to specific questions. No book covers every physical situation, set of boundary conditions, or question. I believe that, to get answers to the kind of questions I posed, someone would need to build and analyze a detailed physical model, do experiments, or both. I think experiments would be easier and more definitive on "what", but wouldn't necessarily answer "why".
Probably good fodder for future discussions - if we have some models or experiments to talk about. But I have never seen a book or paper that discusses the problem I posed specifically, and I have looked somewhat at least. The relationship between action and reaction are far from intuitive in some physical systems - hard analysis and experiment is the only way I know to deal with that.
In the meanwhile, I think we're gonna have to live with "anecdotal evidence". Which I think often works just fine in musical practice.
Patrick - I seriously doubt the issue is that you are stupid. The problem is that there are a lot of levels to look at these kinds of problems. One can do it very descriptively with minimal formal math, physics, and engineering - I'd guess that's probably what most music programs do. One can be very scientifically rigorous, and build detailed theoretical models and measure things via experiment to corroborate or falsify. Or one can take a middle approach, which is what I think this book does. IMO, it requires at least a basic college level of mathematical and scientific/engineering background. Without that, I imagine this book could be very annoying to read.