Common Sound Deadening Terms Made Easy

sammy1
10+ year member

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I'm not sure if this has been posted before but I thought this may be some useful information for everyone. sorry if this is a repost:

Sound Deadening Terms Made Easy




ABSORPTION. A property of materials that allows a reduction in the amount of sound energy reflected. The introduction of an absorbent into the surfaces of a room will reduce the sound pressure level in that room by not reflecting all of the sound energy striking the room's surfaces. The effect of absorption merely reduces the resultant sound level in the room produced by energy that has already entered the room.

ABSORPTION COEFFICIENT. A measure of the sound-absorbing ability of a surface. It is defined as the fraction of incident sound energy absorbed or otherwise not reflected by a surface. Unless otherwise specified, a diffuse sound field is assumed. The values at the sound-absorption coefficient usually range from about 0.01 for marble slate to almost 1.0 for long absorbing wedges often used in anechoic rooms.

ACOUSTICS. (1) The science of sound, including the generation, transmission, and effects of sound waves, both audible and inaudible. (2) The physical qualities of a room or other enclosure (such as size, shape, amount of noise) that determine the audibility and perception of speech and music within the room.

ACOUSTIC TRAUMA. Damage to the hearing mechanism caused by a sudden burst of intense noise, or by a blast. The term usually implies a single traumatic event.

AIRBORNE SOUND. Sound that reaches the point of interest by propagation through air.

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AMBIENT NOISE. The total of all noise in the environment, other than the noise from the source of interest. This term is used interchangeably with background noise.

ANECHOIC ROOM. A room in which the boundaries absorb nearly all the incident sound, thereby, effectively creating free field conditions.

ANSI. The American National Standards Institute.

ARTICULATION INDEX (AI). A numerically calculated measure of the intelligibility of transmitted or processed speech. It takes into account the limitations of the transmission path and the background noise. The articulation index can range in magnitude between 0 and 1.0 . If the AI is less than 0.1, speech intelligibility is generally low. If it is above 0.6, speech intelligibility is generally high.

ATTENUATION. The reduction of sound intensity by various means (e.g., air, humidity, porous materials...).

AUDIO FREQUENCY. The frequency of oscillation of an audible sound wave. Any frequency between 20 and 20,000 Hz.

AUDIOGRAM. A graph showing individual hearing acuity as a function of frequency.

AUDIOMETER. An instrument for measuring individual hearing acuity.

A-WEIGHTED SOUND LEVEL. A measure of sound pressure level designed to reflect the acuity of the human ear, which does not respond equally to all frequencies. The ear is less efficient at low and high frequencies than at medium or speech-range frequencies. Therefore, to describe a sound containing a wide range of frequencies in a manner representative of the ear's response, it is necessary to reduce the effects of the low and high frequencies with respect to the medium frequencies. The resultant sound level is said to be A-weighted, and the units are dBA. The A-weighted sound level is also called the noise level. Sound level meters have an A-weighting network for measuring A-weighted sound level.

BACKGROUND NOISE. The total of all noise in a system or situation, independent of the presence of the desired signal. In acoustical measurements, strictly speaking, the term "background noise" means electrical noise in the measurement system. However, in popular usage the term "background noise" is often used to mean the noise in the environment, other than the noise from the source of interest.

BAND. Any segment of the frequency spectrum.

BAND PASS FILTER. A wave filter that has a single transmission band extending from a lower cutoff frequency greater than zero to a finite upper cutoff frequency.

BROADBAND NOISE. Noise with components over a wide range of frequencies.

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CALIBRATOR (ACOUSTICAL). A device which produces a known sound pressure on the microphone of a sound level measurement system, and is used to adjust the system to Standard specifications.

COCHLEA. A spirally coiled organ located within the inner ear which contains the receptor organs essential to hearing.

CUTOFF FREQUENCIES. The frequencies that mark the ends of a band, or the points at Which the characteristics of a filter change from pass to no-pass.

CYCLE. The complete sequence of values of a periodic quantity that occurs during one period.

CYCLES PER SECOND. A measure of frequency numerically equivalent to hertz.

CYLINDRICAL WAVE. A wave in which the surfaces of constant phase are coaxial cylinders. A line of closely-spaced sound sources radiating into an open space produces a free sound field of cylindrical waves.

DAMPING. The dissipation of energy with time or distance. The term is generally applied to the attenuation of sound in a structure owing to the internal sound-dissipative properties of the structure or to the addition of sound-dissipative materials.

dBA. Unit of sound level. The weighted sound pressure level by the use of the A metering characteristic and weighting specified in ANSI Specifications for Sound Level Metere,

S1.4-1983. dBA is used as a measure of human response to sound.

DECIBEL. A unit of sound pressure level, abbreviated dB.

DIFFRACTION. A modification which soundwaves undergo in passing by the edges of solid bodies.

DIRECTIVITY INDEX. In a given direction froma sound source, the difference in decibels between (a) the sound pressure level produced by the source in that direction, and (b) the space-average sound pressure level of that source, measured at the same distance.

DOPPLER EFFECT (DOPPLER SHIFT). The apparent upward shift in frequency of a sound as a noise source approaches the listener or the apparent downward shift when the noise source recedes. The classic example is the change in pitch of a railroad whistle as the locomotive approaches and passes by.

DOSIMETER. A device worn by a worker for determining the worker's accumulated noise exposure with regard to level and time according to a pre-determined integration formula.

ECHO. A wave that has been reflected or otherwise returned with sufficient magnitude and delay, so as to be detected as a wave distinct from that directly transmitted.

EQUIVALENT A-WEIGHTED SOUND LEVEL (Leq). The constant sound level that, in a given time period, would convey the same sound energy as

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the actual time-varying A-weighted sound level.

FAR FIELD. Describes a sound source region in free space where the sound pressure level obeys the inverse-square law (the sound pressure level decreases 6 dB with each doubling of distance from the source). Also, in this region the sound particle velocity is in phase with the sound pressure. Closer to the source where these two conditions do not hold constitutes the "near field" region.

FILTER. A device for separating components of a signal on the basis of their frequency. It allows components in one or more frequency bands to pass relatively unattenuated, and it attenuates components in other frequency bands.

FREE SOUND FIELD (FREE FIELD). A sound field in which the effects of obstacles or boundaries on sound propagated in that field are negligible.

FREQUENCY. The number of times per second that the sine wave of sound repeats itself, or that the sine wave of a vibrating object repeats itself. Now expressed in hertz (Hz), formerly in cycles per second (cps).

HAIR CELL. Sensory cells in the cochlea which transform the mechanical energy of sound into nerve impulses.

HARMONIC. A sinusoidal (pure-tone) component whose frequency is a whole-number multiple of the fundamental frequency of the wave. If a component has a frequency twice that of the

fundamental it is called the second harmonic, etc...

HEARING. The subjective human response to sound.

HEARING LEVEL. A measured threshold of hearing at a specified frequency, expressed in decibels relative to a specified standard of normal hearing. The deviation in decibels of an individual's threshold from the zero reference of the audiometer.

HEARING LOSS. A term denoting an impairment of auditory acuity. The amount of hearing impairment, in decibels, measured as a set of hearing threshold levels at specified frequencies. Types of hearing loss are: 1. Conductive: A loss originating in the conductive mechanism of the ear; 2. Sensor-neural: A loss originating in the cochlea or the fibers of the auditory nerve; 3. Noise induced: A sensor-neural loss attributed to the effects of noise.

HEARING THRESHOLD LEVEL (HTL). Amount (in decibels) by which an individual's threshold of audibility differs from a standard audiometric threshold.

HERTZ (Hz). Unit of measurement of frequency, numerically equal to cycles per second

IMPACT INSULATION CLASS (IC). A single-figure rating that compares the impact sound insulating capabilities of floor-ceiling assemblies to a reference contour.

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IMPACT SOUND. The sound produced by the collision of two solid objects. Typical sources are footsteps, dropped objects, etc., on an interior surface (wall, floor, or ceiling) of a building.

IMPULSIVE NOISE, a) Either a single sound pressure peak (with either a rise time less than 200 milliseconds or total duration less than 200 milliseconds) or multiple sound pressure peaks (with either rise time less than 200 milliseconds or total duration less than 200 milliseconds) spaced at least by 200 millisecond pauses, b) A sharp sound pressure peak occurring in a short interval of time.

 
INFRASONIC. Sounds of a frequency lower than 20 hertz.

INTENSITY. The sound energy flow through a unit area in a unit time.

INVERSE SQUARE LAW. A description of the acoustic wave behavior in which the mean-square pressure varies inversely with the square of the distance from the source. This behavior occurs in free field situations, where the sound pressure level decreases 6 dB with each doubling of distance from the source.

ISO. The International Organization for Standardization.

MASKING NOISE. A noise that is intense enough to render inaudible or unintelligible another sound that is also present.

MEDIUM. A substance carrying a sound wave.

NEAR FIELD. The sound field very near to a source, where the sound pressure does not obey the inverse-square law and the particle velocity is not in phase with the sound pressure.

NIOSH. The National Institute for occupational Safety and Health.

NOISE, 1. Unwanted sound. 2. Any sound not occurring in the natural environment, such as sounds emanating from aircraft, highways, industrial, commercial and residential sources. 3. An erratic, intermittent, or statistically random oscillation.

NOISE ISOLATION CLASS. (NIC). A single number rating derived in a prescribed manner from the measured values of noise reduction between two areas or rooms. It provides an evaluation of the sound isolation between two enclosed spaces that are acoustically connected by one or more paths.

NOISE LEVEL. For airborne sound , unless specified to the contrary, it is the A-weighted sound level.

NOISE REDUCTION (NR). The numerical difference, in decibels, of the average sound pressure levels in two areas or rooms. A measurement of "noise reduction" combines the effect of the sound transmission loss performance of structures separating the two areas or rooms, plus the effect of acoustic absorption present in the receiving room.

THRESHOLD SHIFT. A change in the threshold of audibility at a specified frequency from a threshold previously established. The amount of threshold shift is customarily expressed in decibels.

TIMBRE. An attribute of auditory sensation allowing a subject to judge that two sounds similarly presented and having the same loudness and pitch are dissimilar, e.g., trumpet vs. violin.

 
TINNITUS. Ringing in the ear or noise sensed in the head. Onset may be due to an acoustic trauma and persist in the absence of acoustical stimulation (in which case it may indicate a lesion of the auditory system).

TONE. A sound of definite pitch. A pure tone has a sinusoidal wave form.

TRANSDUCER. A device capable of being actuated by waves from one or more transmission systems or media and supplying related waves to one or more other

transmission systems or media. Examples are microphones, accelerometers, and loudspeakers.

ULTRASONIC. Sounds or a frequency higher than 20,000 hertz.

VIBRATION. An oscillatory motion of solid bodies described by displacement, velocity, or acceleration with respect to a given reference point.

VIBRATION ISOLATOR. A resilient support for vibrating equipment designed to reduce the amount of vibration transmitted to the other structures.

WAVE. A disturbance that travels through a medium by virtue of the elastic properties of that medium.

WAVELENGTH. For a periodic wave (such as sound in air), the distance between analogous points on any two successive waves. The wavelength of sound in air or in water is inversely proportional to the frequency of the sound. Thus, the lower the frequency, the longer the wavelength.

WEIGHTING. Prescribed frequency filtering provided in a sound level meter.

WHITE NOISE. Noise whose energy is uniform over wide range of frequencies, being analogous in spectrum characteristics to white light.

 
holy crap thats a shit load of info. dont think there are too many people that will use or need it, but its nice to know //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif

 
thats pretty cool but i still odnt understand some of the terms..too much techincal talk. I realize its probably hard to define some of them without being techincal, just a comment though.

 
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