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What should we be reading?? Johnston Johnston –Interlude - 2 piano –Interlude - 6 percussion –Chapter 7 – hearing, the ear, loudness –Appendix II – Logarithms,

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Presentation on theme: "What should we be reading?? Johnston Johnston –Interlude - 2 piano –Interlude - 6 percussion –Chapter 7 – hearing, the ear, loudness –Appendix II – Logarithms,"— Presentation transcript:

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2 What should we be reading?? Johnston Johnston –Interlude - 2 piano –Interlude - 6 percussion –Chapter 7 – hearing, the ear, loudness –Appendix II – Logarithms, etc, –Initial Handout – Logarithms and Scientific Notation Roederer Roederer –2.3 –the Ear –3.1, 3.2 material covered in class only –3.4 loudness (Friday)

3 Upcoming Topics Psychophysics Psychophysics –Sound perception –Tricks of the musician –Tricks of the mind Room Acoustics Room Acoustics

4 October 14,2005

5 The Process

6 At the Eardrum Pressure wave arrives at the eardrum It exerts a force The drum moves so that WORK IS DONE The Sound Wave delivers ENERGY to the EARDRUM at a measurable RATE. POWER We call the RATE of Energy delivery a new quantity: POWER

7 POWER Example: How much energy does a 60 watt light bulb consume in 1 minute?

8 We PAY for Kilowatt Hours We PAY for ENERGY!!

9 More Stuff on Power 10 Watt INTENSITY = power/unit area

10 Intensity

11 Same energy (and power) goes through surface (1) as through surface (2) Sphere area increases with r 2 (A=4  r 2 ) Power level DECREASES with distance from the source of the sound.  Goes as (1/r 2 ) ENERGY So….

12 To the ear …. 50m 30 watt Area of Sphere =  r 2 =3.14 x 50 x 50 = 7850 m 2 Ear Area = 0.000025 m 2

13 Continuing Scientific Notation = 9.5 x 10 -8 watts

14 Huh?? Scientific Notation = 9.5 x 10 -8 Move the decimal point over by 8 places. Another example: 6,326,865=6.3 x 10 6 Move decimal point to the RIGHT by 6 places. REFERENCE: See the Appendix in the Johnston Test

15 Scientific Notation Appendix 2 in Johnston 0.000000095 watts = 9.5 x 10 -8 watts

16 Decibels - dB The decibel (dB) is used to measure sound level, but it is also widely used in electronics, signals and communication. It is a very important topic for audiophiles.

17 Decibel (dB) Suppose we have two loudspeakers, the first playing a sound with power P 1, and another playing a louder version of the same sound with power P 2, but everything else (how far away, frequency) kept the same. The difference in decibels between the two is defined to be 10 log (P 2 /P 1 ) dB where the log is to base 10. ?

18 What the **#& is a logarithm? Bindell’s definition: Take a big number … like 23094800394 Round it to one digit: 20000000000 Count the number of zeros … 10 The log of this number is about equal to the number of zeros … 10. Actual answer is 10.3 Good enough for us!

19 Back to the definition of dB: The dB is proportional to the LOG 10 of a ratio of intensities. Let’s take P 1 =Threshold Level of Hearing which is 10 -12 watts/m 2 Take P 2 =P=The power level we are interested in. 10 log (P 2 /P 1 )

20 An example: The threshold of pain is 1 w/m 2

21 Another Example

22 Look at the dB Column

23 DAMAGE TO EAR Continuous dB Permissible Exposure Time 85 dB 8 hours 88 dB 4 hours 91 dB 2 hours 94 dB 1 hour 97 dB 30 minutes 100 dB 15 minutes 103 dB 7.5 minutes 106 dB 3.75 min (< 4min) 109 dB 1.875 min (< 2min) 112 dB.9375 min (~1 min) 115 dB.46875 min (~30 sec)

24 Can you Hear Me???

25 Frequency Dependence

26 Why all of this stuff??? We do NOT hear loudness in a linear fashion …. we hear logarithmically Think about one person singing.  Add a second person and it gets a louder.  Add a third and the addition is not so much.  Again ….

27 Let’s look at an example. This is Joe the Jackhammerer. He makes a lot of noise. Assume that he makes a noise of 100 dB.

28 At night he goes to a party with his Jackhammering friends. All Ten of them!

29 Start at the beginning Remember those logarithms? Take the number 1000000=10 6 The log of this number is the number of zeros or is equal to “6”. Let’s multiply the number by 1000=10 3 New number = 10 6 x 10 3 =10 9 The exponent of these numbers is the log. The log of { A (10 6 )xB(10 3 ) } =log A + log B 96 3

30 Remember the definition

31 Continuing On The power level for a single jackhammer is 10 -2 watt. The POWER for 10 of them is  10 x 10 -2 = 10 -1 watts. A 10% increase in dB!


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