Navigation: Acoustics101
Acoustics 101
Propagation of sound
Wavelength & Loudness
Speed of Sound
Equal Loudness Contours
Perception of sound
Inverse Square Law
Reverberation
Adding decibels
Sound Absorption
What is Noise
Noise reduction
Relative Loudness
Noise interference w/ speech
Speech Intelligibility
Signal to Noise Ratio (S/NR)
Speech Directivity
Speech privacy
Masking sound systems
Transmission of sound
Resonant Frequencies
Sound Transmission Class
Sound Isolation
Sound sealants
Sound absorption coefficients
Noise sources
Metric conversions
Perception of SoundThe deviation of sound above and below the atmospheric pressure levels is called Sound Pressure. The energy expanded in the the process of sound propagation is labeled intensity (loudness) and is measured in energy units. At this point the science of sound can be a little more complex and intimidating since placing a numerical value on sound is very difficult due to the extraordinary sensitivity of the human ear. Our ears can detect deviations in atmospheric pressure in the order of 1,000,000 to 1 and sound intensities of over a trillion to one.
The Relative Loudness levels are important insofar as they demonstrate that a 10-decibel increase will be perceived as twice as loud as the pervious level or conversely, a decrease of 50% from the previous higher level. It is less important to understand the physics of this relative difference as much as to accept it as an acoustical phenomenon. |
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