Concrete DrillSitting in a faculty office during a quarter break, enjoying the quiet, a faculty member was launched about a meter into the air by the sudden sound of a loud concrete drill directly above his office. After a brief and loud burst, there was again quiet for long enough for him to settle down to work and then another sudden loud burst of noise. After several such episodes removed the possibility of concentration, he decided to measure the sound and collected the following data:
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Analysis, Concrete Drill SoundSound measurement in decibels inside of buildings can be so misleading as to be worthless since it gives equal weighting to low frequency building sounds to which the human ear has minimal response. This example shows that the use of an A Contour filter gives a much better representation of what the ear hears. Besides the conceptual difference between sound loudness and sound intensity, this example employs the idea of the just noticeable difference in sound level.
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Fire Alarm MeasurementPeriodic testing of the fire alarm in the physics building provided the opportunity for measurement of the sound level with different filter contours. Measurements were made inside a faculty office down the hall from the alarm. The following data was collected:
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Index Hearing concepts Sound level measurement Sound measurement examples | |||||||||||||
HyperPhysics***** Sound | Go Back |
Analysis, Fire Alarm SoundSound measurement in decibels inside of buildings can be so misleading as to be worthless since it gives equal weighting to low frequency building sounds to which the human ear has minimal response. This example shows that the use of an A Contour filter gives a much better representation of what the ear hears. Besides the conceptual difference between sound loudness and sound intensity, this example employs the ideas of the just noticeable difference in sound level and the "rule of thumb" for adding loudness.
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Index Hearing concepts Sound level measurement Sound measurement examples | |
HyperPhysics***** Sound | Go Back |