Abstract

We measured the spatial damping of low-frequency surface waves at air-water interfaces using a novel heterodyne light-scattering technique. For pure water the measured damping agrees well with linear hydrodynamic theory. For interfaces covered with a monolayer of pentadecanoic acid, we find a 5-fold increase in damping at a surface concentration of 2.2 molecules nm -2 , near the high-density end of the gas/liquid-expanded coexistence region. The behavior of the damping as a function of surface concentration cannot be explained by existing theories

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