Science of Sound Dealing With Wanted and Unwanted Sounds, Assures Optimum Conditions For Producing and Listing To Speech, Music .
Science of Sound Dealing With Wanted and Unwanted Sounds, Assures Optimum Conditions For Producing and Listing To Speech, Music .
Science of Sound Dealing With Wanted and Unwanted Sounds, Assures Optimum Conditions For Producing and Listing To Speech, Music .
to speech , music..
Hearing/Listening communication channel
lHistory of Acoustics
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) discovered the general principles of sympathetic vibrations, or resonance, and the correspondence between the frequency of vibrations and the length of a pendulum. Leonhard Euler and Daniel Bernoulli's studies of vibrating cords in the 18th century eventually led to the development of Fourier analysis, one of the most important tools of mathematics and mathematical physics.
Acoustics, one of the oldest branches of physics, originated with Pythagoras's studies of music over 2,500 years ago. Scientific milestones abound in this field:
Sir Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz independently developed the theory of calculus, which in turn allowed the derivation of the general wave equation by the French mathematician and scientist Jean Le Rond d'Alembert in the 1740s. Hermann von Helmholtz's On the Sensations of Tone As a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music (1863) made substantial contributions to understanding the mechanisms of hearing and to the psychophysics of sound and music.
John
William Strutt's The Theory of Sound (1877/78), a monument of acoustical literature, was the first treatise to examine questions of vibrations, the resonance of elastic solids and gases, and acoustical propagation in material media.
century French mathematician, established his theory about the analysis of a complex periodic wave into its spectral components.
German physicist Georg Simon Ohm hypothesized that the human ear is sensitive to these spectral components. His Law of Hearing stated that the ear is sensitive to the amplitudes, but not the phases, of the harmonics of a complex tone. 20th-century American physicist Wallace Sabine initiated the science of modern architectural acoustics by finding ways to correct the acoustics of noisy rooms. Hungarian-born American physicist Georg von Bksy validated Helmholtz's theory of hearing with his Experiments in Hearing (1960), the classic of the modern theory of the ear.
PRODUCTION OF SOUND
SOUNDING BODY EMITS SOUND IN A STATE OF VIBRATION,WHEN THE
VIBRATION OF THE BODY DIE OUT SOUND EMITTE D WILL ALSO DIE OUT.
duration) 100 db Aural acuity (short duration)and damage to Auditory Organs (long duration) 120 db Pain 150 db instant loss of hearing
Ears Sensitivity
Average persons ears capacity
Hz
- 20 20,000
(power) in watts Lowest intensity Threshold of Audibility(10^-12 w/sq.m) Highest intensity Threshold of Pain(1 w/sq.m)
Decibel scale
Ear - Self defense mechanism Ears sensitivity decreases high intensity
sound Proportionate logarithm of intensity N(db) = 20 Log I (measured intensity) Io(threshold of audibility 10 w/sq.m)
Absorbed(a) Transmitted(t)
If source I = 1, r+a+t=1
Absorption Co-efficient
Absorption Co-efficient = a + t
(all thats not reflected : 1-r )
Reverberant component
Sound types:
Airborne
Structure borne
Reverberation Time
Reverberation time is defined as the time for the sound to die
away to a level 60 decibels below its original level
Acoustical Requirements :
Floors : Carpets,wooden,elevated floors Ceiling : Wooden, Acoustical tiles(reflective)
boards Rear walls :Perforated acoustical boards(Absorptive ), soft boards with upholstery
Effects of Geometry and shape pleasing if it is evenly dispersed, with no Sound is more
prominent echoes, no significant "dead spots" or "live spots" in the auditorium. This even dispersion is usually achieved by avoiding any focusing surfaces and avoiding large flat areas which reflect sound into the listing area. Sometimes it is desirable to add some anti-focusing surfaces
Focusing Surfaces
Absorption Concrete Reflective Glass Reflective Metal Reflective Perforated gypsum board Absorptive Acoustical Tile, Glass wool Absorptive Fabric (carpet, seat upholstery, draperies)Absorptive
Characteristics of sound
Frequency-no.of vibrations per second,
measured in cycles per sec or Hertz Intensity or Loudness-measurement of quantity of sound energy, measured as below(intensity physical quantity, loudness depends on human ear) Measurement of sound- very sophisticated so measured as logarithm of intensity of sound i.e decibels.
Reverberation time
Audience factor
1.3-1.5s
1.8-3s 1-1.5s
2/3
2/3 1/3
1.6-2s
1-1.5s 1.5-2s 2-3s
Full
Quorum(probable size) 1/3 full
Site selection and planning Volume, i.e size and height Shape Treatment of interior surfaces Reverberation time Seat, Seating arrangements, audience Sound absorption
Auditorium Acoustics
Acoustic separation is necessary at the entrance of the auditorium and also between projection room and auditoria. At entrances, this is achieved with lobbies and sound reducing door sets.
Sound Propagation in an Auditorium Sound waves travel at about 345 meters/second, so that the sound coming directly from a source within an auditorium will generally reach a listener after a time of anywhere from 0.01 to 0.2 seconds.
Direct sound and early Reflections the single Early reflections are
most overlooked opportunity for developing good sounding speech in todays auditoriums and sanctuaries, live theaters, lecture halls and even classrooms. These most desirable reflections can be mechanically induced by appropriate positioning and shaping of sound reflecting surfaces. They can be electronically emulated using a time delayed distributed sound system.
sound systems to create overly loud sounds. They use sound systems to generate a comfortable loudness for the direct sound and then compliment this with a bevy of early reflections, immediately followed by a distinct absence of late reflections and finally backfilled with a groundswell of distant sounding reverberation. Early reflections cant be distinguished from the direct sound and thats why they are the only reflections that actually add to clarity of speech.
Echoes
Echoes can be fun but they also ruin the understanding of speech Early reflections are those that bounce off nearby objects.
But when the object is located some distance away, the situation changes, you can hear the reflection off of it and we call this acoustic event an echo. An echo can be great fun at times but when its time to pay attention to someone talking, it also makes listening very difficult. The echo is a good example of a late reflection because it is a reflection that can be distinguished as being separate from the direct signal. A good, clear and bright sounding auditorium provides ample opportunity for many early reflections to reach each seat in the hall.
Internal noises
absorbent screens Planning :separating noisy spaces from quiet ones Placing of noise equipment massive part of the building. Covering surfaces resilient materials Noise in space- by absorbent surfaces Airborne-airtight and insulating construction, Structure borne discontinuity.