lol i'll admit i thought you were teasing when you said you didn't know what an octave was. i guess i take for granted that i've played piano and bass guitar most my life... i assume everybody knows what an octave is.
an octave is a special musical interval between two tones, formed when the ratio between the frequencies of the tones is 2:1. the ear hears an equivalence between the tones when this is the case. with regard to frequency, the octave interval is much wider at high frequencies than at low frequencies. for example, one octave above 40 Hz is 80 Hz, but an octave above 1,000 Hz is 2,000 Hz. both of these intervals are heard as musically similar, however. it all gets into logarithmic junk, and i don't really understand it all to tell you the truth... but i know what i need to know, and that's that a 24 db/octave slope is going to mean less frequencies below the cut-off point than a 12 db/octave slope. that may not have made any sense once again, but if it did, great. if not, just let me know and i'll attempt at screwing up your idea of an octave once more. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
peace