Understanding Decibels

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Week 1: *Fundamentals of Sound *Sound Levels and the Decibel
Advertisements

SOUND PRESSURE, POWER AND LOUDNESS MUSICAL ACOUSTICS Science of Sound Chapter 6.
 The intensity of a sound is related to the amount of energy flowing in the sound waves. It depends on the amplitude of the vibrations producing the.
Auditory Neuroscience - Lecture 1 The Nature of Sound auditoryneuroscience.com/lectures.
PHYSICS OF SOUND PHYSICS OF SOUND HEARING CONSERVATION PROGRAM 1 28 Jan 2013.
Kristela Milan III - Galileo. Sound surrounds us all the time. From the chirping of birds when we wake up to the croaking of frogs at night. All the sounds.
Sound Definition of Sound Sound is a wave created by vibrating objects and propagated through a medium from one location to another.
3/16/2010IB Physics HL 21 Medical Physics:Hearing - IB Objectives I.1.1Describe the basic structure of the human ear I.1.2State and explain how sound pressure.
All sounds are produced by the vibration of matter. If there is no vibration, there is no sound.
Chapter 13 Section 1 Sound Waves. Sound Waves What are they? – Longitudinal – Require medium.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Loudness Physics of Music PHY103 experiments: mix at different volumes
Sound Intensity and Vibrations. Sound Intensity ▪Rate that energy flows through a given area – Intensity = (ΔE/Δt)= P. area Intensity is Power ÷ area.
Music Physics 202 Professor Vogel (Professor Carkner’s notes, ed) Lecture 8.
Audio and Acoustics Theory
1 Live Sound Reinforcement Audio measurements. 2 Live Sound Reinforcement One of the most common terms you will come across when handling any type of.
L6 and L7 Sound Intensity, Sound Level/Loudness (Decibels), The Ear.
DB(decibel), and so on… … background for using digital audio editors Reference.
Recording Arts…Audio Fall Range of Human Hearing 20 Hz – 20,000 Hz or 20 Hz – 20 kHz.
Daily Challenge, 10/26 WHAT IS SOUND? Earlier, we saw how waves on a Slinky can cancel each other, add together to make one big wave, pass through each.
Understanding Decibels
Loudness October 18, 2006 What is it?? The Process.
Lecture # 22 Audition, Audacity & Sound Editing Sound Representation.
Lecture 17 October 29, On Wednesday - Thumping.
Puzzler 1 Imagine that you have three boxes, one containing two black marbles, one containing two white marbles, and the third, one black marble and one.
Acoustics/Psychoacoustics Huber Ch. 2 Sound and Hearing.
Medical Physics Brain.
Training materials for wireless trainers
Sound – Part 2.
Chapter 13 - Sound 13.1 Sound Waves.
The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.
The Physics of Sound. Sound: a series of disturbances of molecules within, and propagated through, an elastic medium or… Sound: is an alteration in the.
Unit 4 - Sound. Frequency of Sound  how often the particles of the medium vibrate when a wave passes through the medium.  the number of complete back-and-forth.
SOUND Longitudinal Wave Travels through some medium Cannot travel through a vacuum How does vibrating drum produce sound? Skin moving up presses air.
Transverse Wave The direction of particle oscillation is perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation.
David Meredith Aalborg University
Week 2 Sound Physics, Ranges of Hearing Frequency, Wavelength, Period, Velocity Audio Engineering & Sound Production Unit code: AUD202 AUDIO & ACOUSTICS.
Georgia Institute of Technology Introduction to Processing Digital Sounds part 1 Barb Ericson Georgia Institute of Technology Sept 2005.
Lesson 02 Physical quantities 5 th October 2012Physical quantities1.
Sound
Sound and the human ear. Sound Sound radiates from the point source in all directions Sound intensity is power / Area Spherical area is 4πr 2 so sound.
Instructor: M Sc. Eng. Nagham Ali Hasan 2 nd semester 2008/2009 University of Palestine College of Applied Engineering & Urban Planning Department of Architecture,
SOUND PRESSURE, POWER AND LOUDNESS MUSICAL ACOUSTICS Science of Sound Chapter 6.
Sound Pressure, Power, and Intensity Chapter 6. Sound Pressure/Power/Intensity All three terms describe physical sensations. All three are perceived on.
Sound Waves Can you hear me now?. Wave Review Sound is a Longitudinal Wave- it moves back and forth like a spring. Sound is a Mechanical Wave- it needs.
Sound Waves Vibration of a tuning fork
Intro-Sound-part1 Introduction to Processing Digital Sounds part 1 Barb Ericson Georgia Institute of Technology Oct 2009.
Sound Intensity Intensity definition Changes with distance Intensity scale - decibels.
Chapter 26: Sound. The Origin of Sound  All sounds are produced by the vibrations of material objects  Pitch – our subjective impression of sound 
Sound Intensity and Intensity Level
 Consider a sound point source and the sound pulse emitted by it:  The disturbance leaves the source at the speed of sound, and in the form of a spherical.
3. Energy in Waves Updated May 13, Index A.Waves and Amplitude 1.Amplitude and Particle Velocity 2.Impedance (of a spring) 3.Specific (acoustic)
Chapter 12 Preview Objectives The Production of Sound Waves
ARCHITECTURAL ACOUSTICS
AN ACTIVE LEARNING ASSIGNMENT IN “AUDIO AND VIDEO SYSTEMS” GUIDED BY : PROF. VISMAY YAGNIK PROF. NIRAV PATEL PREPARED BY : MOHNISH LAVANIA ( )
V = fλ. 1. A wave is a traveling disturbance. 2. A wave carries energy from place to place.
SOUND FUNDAMENTALS Prepared by:SHUBHAM UMAKANT GUPTA En no
Physics Mrs. Dimler SOUND.  Every sound wave begins with a vibrating object, such as the vibrating prong of a tuning fork. Tuning fork and air molecules.
S o u n d. S p e e d o f S o u n d The relationship of the speed of sound vw, its frequency f, and its wavelength y is given by v w = fy In air, the speed.
4. The Ear and the Perception of Sound (Psychoacoustics) Updated May 13,
Intensity.
Sound Waves Vibration of a tuning fork.
Sound.
Noise & Sound Graeme Murphy – National Brand Manager, Industrial Equipment.
The Physics of Sound.
L6 and L7 Sound Intensity, Sound Level/Loudness (Decibels), The Ear
Topic 4.4 Extended A – Sound intensity
Sound.
All sounds are produced by the vibration of matter
BLM Circuit Theory Prof. Dr. Nizamettin AYDIN
Presentation transcript:

Understanding Decibels Title page Sources: http://www.glenbrook.k12.il.us/gbssci/phys/Class/sound/u11l2b.html http://www.oharenoise.org/Noise_101/sld008.htm

Air pressure and sound Air pressure at sea level is about 101,325 Pascals (Pa) (about one “atmosphere”) or 14.7 pounds per square inch (psi) or 1 kg per square cm. This will register as 76 cm, or 760 mm, or 29.92 inches, of mercury on a mercury barometer. Sources: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wbaromtr.htm http://www.valdosta.edu/~grissino/geog3150/lecture3.htm

Micropascal and Pascal The variations in air pressure that our ears hear as sound are very, very small, between 20 microPascals (mPa), or 0.00002 Pa (or newtons/m2, or 0.0002 microbar or dyne/cm2), and 20 Pa. Source: http://www.safetyline.wa.gov.au/institute/level2/course18/lecture53/l53_02.asp

Power and watts Power, or sound energy (w = work) radiated by a source per unit of time, is measured in watts. Source: http://www-ed.fnal.gov/ntep/f98/projects/nrel_energy_2/power.html

Watt and Picowatt The faintest sound we can hear, 0.00002 Pa, translates into 10-12 (0.000000000001) watts, called a picowatt. The loudest sound our ears can tolerate, about 20 Pa, is equivalent to 1 watt.

Power comparison: London to New York The physicist Alexander Wood once compared this range from loudest to quietest to the energy received from a 50 watt bulb situated in London, ranging from close by to that received by someone in New York. Source: http://www.sfu.ca/sonic-studio/handbook/Decibel.html

Power comparison: Voices powering a light bulb It has been estimated that it would take more than 3,000,000 voices all talking at once to produce power equivalent to that which can light a 100 watt lamp. Source: Fry, D. B. 1979. The Physics of Speech. Cambridge: UP. p. 91

Pressure and amplitude Amplitude is the objective measurement of the degree of change (positive or negative) in atmospheric pressure (the compression and rarefaction of air molecules) caused by sound waves. The amplitude of a pendulum swinging through an angle of 90° is 45°. It is half of the maximum pressure change in the air as the sound wave propagates. Source: http://www.indiana.edu/~emusic/acoustics/amplitude.htm

Intensity The density of power passing through a surface perpendicular to the direction of sound propagation is called sound intensity, and it is usually measured in watts. Or, if we picture a sound wave as an expanding sphere of energy, power is the total amount of kinetic energy contained on the sphere’s surface. Sources: http://www.indiana.edu/~emusic/acoustics/amplitude.htm http://fromdeathtolife.org/cphil/sound2.html

Intensity: Sound transmitted per unit time through a unit area Intensity is measured in power per unit of area, i.e. watts/m2 or watts/cm2. Intensity is proportional to the square of the amplitude (A2). If you double the amplitude of a wave, i.e. if the ratio of the amplitudes of two sounds is 1:2, the ratio of the intensities is 1:4; tripling the amplitude results in a ratio of 1:9.

Intensity of a wave in a free field The intensity of a wave in a free field drops off as the inverse square of the distance from the source. Source: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/acoustic/invsqs.html

Inverse Square Law Plot Source: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/acoustic/invsqs.html

Units of measurement sound pressure: The total instantaneous pressure at a point in space, in the presence of a sound wave, minus the static pressure at that point. sound pressure amplitude: Absolute value of the instantaneous pressure. Unit: Pascal (Pa) sound power: Sound energy (‘the ability to do work’) radiated by a source per unit of time. Unit: watt (W). sound intensity: Average rate of sound energy transmitted in a specified direction at a point through a unit area normal to this direction at the point considered. Unit: watt per square meter (W/m2) or square centimeter (W/cm2). sound pressure level: The sound pressure squared, referenced to 20 mPa2 measured in dB. Commonly, how loud the sound is measured in decibels. Source: http://www.webref.org/acoustics/s.htm

Our ears can compress sound waves The muscles of the iris can contract or dilate the pupils to adjust the amount of light coming into our eyes. In an analogous way, the middle ear has a mechanism which can adjust the intensity of sound waves striking our eardrums. This adjustment enables us to discriminate very small changes in the intensity of quiet sounds, but to be much less sensitive to volume changes in louder noises. This means that the human ear can safely hear a huge range of very soft to very loud sounds. Source: Everest, F. Alton. 2001. Master Handbook of Acoustics, 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, pp. 41-48 Graphic: http://cs.swau.edu/~durkin/biol101/lecture31/

Logarithms and the decibel scale If you hear a sound of a certain loudness, and then are asked to choose a sound that is twice as loud as the first sound, the sound you choose will in fact be about ten times the intensity of the first sound. For this reason, a logarithmic scale, one that goes up by powers of ten, is used to measure the loudness of a sound. The exponent of a number (here we use only 10) is its logarithm. Example of a base 10 logarithm: 10 x 10 x 10 x 10 = 10,000 = 104 log10 10,000 = log 10,000 = 4 Here is an excellent tutorial to help you review (or learn for the first time!) logarithms: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wtutor?tutorial=t-log.htm

What is a decibel? A decibel (dB) is a unit for comparing the intensity of two different sounds; it is not a unit of absolute measurement. The usual basis of comparison is a barely audible sound, the sound of a very quiet room, or 0.00002 Pa, at which 0 dB is set.

Bels and Decibels The unit used to compare the intensity of sounds was originally the Bel (in commemoration of the work of Alexander Graham Bell), which was the logarithm of the intensity ratio 10:1. This unit was considered too large to be useful, so a unit one tenth the size of a Bel, the ‘decibel’ (dB), was adopted.

Calculating decibels To compare the intensities of two sounds, I1 and I2, we place the larger value of the two in the numerator of this formula: 10 x log I1/I2 decibels (dB) You will also see this formula calculated using amplitude (air pressure) instead of intensity, as 10 x log x12/x22 decibels (dB), simplified to: 20 x log x1/x2 decibels (dB) Example: What is the difference in decibels between 3.5 and 0.02 watts? 10 log 3.5/0.02 = 10 log (175) = 10 (2.24) = 22.4 dB difference Source: http://www.ac6v.com/db.htm

A power ratio of 1:100 If the intensity of one sound is 100 times greater than that of another, then I1/I2 = 100; log 100 = 2.0 and 10 x 2.0 = 20 dB. An intensity ratio of 1:100 or 0.01 yields an amplitude ratio of 0.1 (√0.01 = 0.1).

A power ratio of 1:2 However, if you were to hear the noise of an air hammer, then the noise of a second air hammer were added to that, the increase in intensity would be only 3 dB, since it would only have an intensity ratio of 1 to 2, i.e. 0.50, and an amplitude ratio of 0.707. (e.g. 40/20 = 2; log 2 = 0.301; 0.301 x 10 = 3dB; √0.5 = .707)

A power ratio of 1:4 A 6 dB change in intensity means an intensity ratio of 1 to 4, i.e. 0.25, with an amplitude ratio of 1 to 2 or 0.50. (e.g. 100/25 = 4; log 4 = .602; .602 x 10 = 6 dB; √0.25 = 0.5)

From softest to loudest The intensity ratio between the faintest audible sound and the loudest sound we can tolerate is one to one trillion, i.e. 1012; the log of 1012 is 12, and 12 x 10 = 120 decibels, the approximate range of intensity that human hearing can perceive and tolerate. The eardrum would perforate instantly upon exposure to a 160 dB sound.

How much is a trillion? One trillion is one million millions, a 1 followed by 12 zeros: 1,000,000,000,000. This comes out to a convenient number (though seldom-used because it is so large) in Chinese, which is organized in units of four zeros instead of three: 1,|000,0|00,00|0,000|. What is this number called in Chinese?

Decibel levels of some common sounds Sound Source Sound Pressure Level (dB) threshold of excellent youthful hearing normal breathing, threshold of good hearing 10 soft whisper 30 mosquito buzzing 40 average townhouse, rainfall 50 ordinary conversation 60 busy street 70 power mower, car horn, ff orchestra 100 air hammer at 1m, threshold of pain 120 rock concert 130 jet engine at 30m 150 rocket engine at 30m 180 More decibel levels here: http://www.lhh.org/noise/decibel.htm

The Range of Human Hearing Our sensitivity to sounds depends on both the amplitude and frequency of a sound. Here is a graph of the range of human hearing.

Annotated Equal Loudness Curves Source: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/sound/eqloud.html#c1

SPL and SL There are two common methods of establishing a reference level r in dB measurements. One uses 20 mPa of a 1,000 Hz tone; this is labeled dB SPL (‘sound pressure level’). The other method uses the absolute threshold frequency for a tone at each individual frequency; this is called dB SL (‘sensation level’). Source: Johnson, Keith. 1997. Acoustic & Auditory Phonetics. Cambridge & Oxford: Blackwell. .p . 53

1 Increase in source power (watts) Change in SPL (dB) Change in apparent loudness x 1.3 1 smallest audible change in sound level, noticeable only if two sounds are played in succession x 2 (doubled) 3 just perceptible x 3.2 5 clearly noticeable x 4 6 a bit less than twice as loud x 10 10 a bit more than twice as loud x 100 20 much louder Sources: http://www.me.psu.edu/lamancusa/me458/3_human.pdf & http://www.tpub.com/neets/book11/45e.htm Audio demonstration: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/courses/spsci/psycho_acoustics/sld008.htm

Amplitude of overtones The harmonics or overtones (also called ‘partials’) of a sound decrease by 12 dB for each doubling of frequency (e.g. 100, 200, 400, 800, 1,600…) or each equivalent of a musical octave. In human speech, however, the lips act as a piston, and strengthen the amplitude of the speech signal (called the radiation factor or radiation impedance), adding back 6 dB to each octave. So the net decrease in amplitude of the overtones of a speech sound is 6 dB per octave. Ladefoged, Peter. 1996. Elements of Acoustic Phonetics .Chicago and London: University of Chicago. P. 104. Source: http://www.leeds.ac.uk/music/studio/teaching/audio/Acoustic/acoustic.htm

Frequency and decibels: ranges and limits Here is a link to a tone rising in frequency to cover much of the range of human hearing. http://homepage.ntu.edu.tw/~karchung/rm_files/range.aiff Here is a link to a tone going down progressively, first in 6 steps of 6 dB each, then again in 12 steps of 3 dB each. http://www.sfu.ca/sonic-studio/handbook/Decibel.html

Decibels: links to explore Wikipedia: Decibel http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decibel How stuff works: What is a decibel…? http://www.howstuffworks.com/question124.htm Another “What is a Decibel?” http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dB.html Sound pressure levels in decibels - dB http://www.coolmath.com/decibels1.htm Decibel calculator for adding decibels http://www.jglacoustics.com/acoustics-dc_1.html

Enough on decibels for now!