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Sound pressure

Sound pressure or acoustic pressure is the local pressure deviation from the ambient (average or equilibrium) atmospheric pressure, caused by a sound wave. In air, sound pressure can be measured using a microphone, and in water with a hydrophone. The SI unit of sound pressure is the pascal (Pa).[1]

Sound measurements
Characteristic
Symbols
 Sound pressure p, SPL,LPA
 Particle velocity v, SVL
 Particle displacement δ
 Sound intensity I, SIL
 Sound power P, SWL, LWA
 Sound energy W
 Sound energy density w
 Sound exposure E, SEL
 Acoustic impedance Z
 Audio frequency AF
 Transmission loss TL

Mathematical definition

 
Sound pressure diagram:
  1. silence;
  2. audible sound;
  3. atmospheric pressure;
  4. sound pressure

A sound wave in a transmission medium causes a deviation (sound pressure, a dynamic pressure) in the local ambient pressure, a static pressure.

Sound pressure, denoted p, is defined by

 
where
  • ptotal is the total pressure,
  • pstat is the static pressure.

Sound measurements

Sound intensity

In a sound wave, the complementary variable to sound pressure is the particle velocity. Together, they determine the sound intensity of the wave.

Sound intensity, denoted I and measured in W·m−2 in SI units, is defined by

 
where
  • p is the sound pressure,
  • v is the particle velocity.

Acoustic impedance

Acoustic impedance, denoted Z and measured in Pa·m−3·s in SI units, is defined by[2]

 
where
  •   is the Laplace transform of sound pressure[citation needed],
  •   is the Laplace transform of sound volume flow rate.

Specific acoustic impedance, denoted z and measured in Pa·m−1·s in SI units, is defined by[2]

 
where
  •   is the Laplace transform of sound pressure,
  •   is the Laplace transform of particle velocity.

Particle displacement

The particle displacement of a progressive sine wave is given by

 
where

It follows that the particle velocity and the sound pressure along the direction of propagation of the sound wave x are given by

 
 
where
  • vm is the amplitude of the particle velocity,
  •   is the phase shift of the particle velocity,
  • pm is the amplitude of the acoustic pressure,
  •   is the phase shift of the acoustic pressure.

Taking the Laplace transforms of v and p with respect to time yields

 
 

Since  , the amplitude of the specific acoustic impedance is given by

 

Consequently, the amplitude of the particle displacement is related to that of the acoustic velocity and the sound pressure by

 
 

Inverse-proportional law

When measuring the sound pressure created by a sound source, it is important to measure the distance from the object as well, since the sound pressure of a spherical sound wave decreases as 1/r from the centre of the sphere (and not as 1/r2, like the sound intensity):[3]

 

This relationship is an inverse-proportional law.

If the sound pressure p1 is measured at a distance r1 from the centre of the sphere, the sound pressure p2 at another position r2 can be calculated:

 

The inverse-proportional law for sound pressure comes from the inverse-square law for sound intensity:

 
Indeed,
 
where

hence the inverse-proportional law:

 

The sound pressure may vary in direction from the centre of the sphere as well, so measurements at different angles may be necessary, depending on the situation. An obvious example of a sound source whose spherical sound wave varies in level in different directions is a bullhorn.[citation needed]

Sound pressure level

Sound pressure level (SPL) or acoustic pressure level is a logarithmic measure of the effective pressure of a sound relative to a reference value.

Sound pressure level, denoted Lp and measured in dB,[4] is defined by:[5]

 
where
  • p is the root mean square sound pressure,[6]
  • p0 is a reference sound pressure,
  • 1 Np is the neper,
  • 1 B = (1/2 ln 10) Np is the bel,
  • 1 dB = (1/20 ln 10) Np is the decibel.

The commonly used reference sound pressure in air is[7]

p0 = 20 μPa,

which is often considered as the threshold of human hearing (roughly the sound of a mosquito flying 3 m away). The proper notations for sound pressure level using this reference are Lp/(20 μPa) or Lp (re 20 μPa), but the suffix notations dB SPL, dB(SPL), dBSPL, or dBSPL are very common, even if they are not accepted by the SI.[8]

Most sound-level measurements will be made relative to this reference, meaning 1 Pa will equal an SPL of 94 dB. In other media, such as underwater, a reference level of 1 μPa is used.[9] These references are defined in ANSI S1.1-2013.[10]

The main instrument for measuring sound levels in the environment is the sound level meter. Most sound level meters provide readings in A, C, and Z-weighted decibels and must meet international standards such as IEC 61672-2013.

Examples

The lower limit of audibility is defined as SPL of 0 dB, but the upper limit is not as clearly defined. While 1 atm (194 dB peak or 191 dB SPL)[11][12] is the largest pressure variation an undistorted sound wave can have in Earth's atmosphere (i.e. if the thermodynamic properties of the air are disregarded, in reality the sound waves become progressively non-linear starting over 150 dB), larger sound waves can be present in other atmospheres or other media, such as underwater or through the Earth.[13]

 
Equal-loudness contour, showing sound-pressure-vs-frequency at different perceived loudness levels

Ears detect changes in sound pressure. Human hearing does not have a flat spectral sensitivity (frequency response) relative to frequency versus amplitude. Humans do not perceive low- and high-frequency sounds as well as they perceive sounds between 3,000 and 4,000 Hz, as shown in the equal-loudness contour. Because the frequency response of human hearing changes with amplitude, three weightings have been established for measuring sound pressure: A, B and C.

In order to distinguish the different sound measures, a suffix is used: A-weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBA or LA. B-weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBB or LB, and C-weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBC or LC. Unweighted sound pressure level is called "linear sound pressure level" and is often written as dBL or just L. Some sound measuring instruments use the letter "Z" as an indication of linear SPL.[13]

Distance

The distance of the measuring microphone from a sound source is often omitted when SPL measurements are quoted, making the data useless, due to the inherent effect of the inverse proportional law. In the case of ambient environmental measurements of "background" noise, distance need not be quoted, as no single source is present, but when measuring the noise level of a specific piece of equipment, the distance should always be stated. A distance of one metre (1 m) from the source is a frequently used standard distance. Because of the effects of reflected noise within a closed room, the use of an anechoic chamber allows sound to be comparable to measurements made in a free field environment.[13]

According to the inverse proportional law, when sound level Lp1 is measured at a distance r1, the sound level Lp2 at the distance r2 is

 

Multiple sources

The formula for the sum of the sound pressure levels of n incoherent radiating sources is

 

Inserting the formulas

 
in the formula for the sum of the sound pressure levels yields
 

Examples of sound pressure

Examples of sound pressure in air at standard atmospheric pressure
Source of sound Distance Sound pressure level[a]
(Pa) (dBSPL)
Shock wave (distorted sound waves > 1 atm; waveform valleys are clipped at zero pressure)[11][12] >1.01×105 >191
Simple open-ended thermoacoustic device[14] [clarification needed] 1.26×104 176
1883 eruption of Krakatoa[15][16] 165 km 172
.30-06 rifle being fired m to
shooter's side
7.09×103 171
Firecracker[17] 0.5 m 7.09×103 171
Stun grenade[18] Ambient 1.60×103
...8.00×103
158–172
9-inch (23 cm) party balloon inflated to rupture[19] At ear 4.92×103 168
9-inch (23 cm) diameter balloon crushed to rupture[19] At ear 1.79×103 159
9-inch (23 cm) party balloon inflated to rupture[19] 0.5 m 1.42×103 157
9-inch (23 cm) diameter balloon popped with a pin[19] At ear 1.13×103 155
LRAD 1000Xi Long Range Acoustic Device[20] 1 m 8.93×102 153
9-inch (23 cm) party balloon inflated to rupture[19] 1 m 731 151
Jet engine[13] 1 m 632 150
9-inch (23 cm) diameter balloon crushed to rupture[19] 0.95 m 448 147
9-inch (23 cm) diameter balloon popped with a pin[19] 1 m 282.5 143
Loudest human voice[21] 1 inch 110 135
Trumpet[22] 0.5 m 63.2 130
Vuvuzela horn[23] 1 m 20.0 120
Threshold of pain[24][25][21] At ear 20–200 120–140
Risk of instantaneous noise-induced hearing loss At ear 20.0 120
Jet engine 100–30 m 6.32–200 110–140
Two-stroke chainsaw[26] 1 m 6.32 110
Jackhammer 1 m 2.00 100
Traffic on a busy roadway 10 m 0.20–0.63 80–90
Hearing damage (over long-term exposure, need not be continuous)[27] At ear 0.36 85
Passenger car 10 m 0.02–0.20 60–80
EPA-identified maximum to protect against hearing loss and other disruptive effects from noise, such as sleep disturbance, stress, learning detriment, etc.[28] Ambient 0.06 70
TV (set at home level) 1 m 0.02 60
Normal conversation 1 m 2×10−3–0.02 40–60
Very calm room Ambient 2.00×10−4
...6.32×10−4
20–30
Light leaf rustling, calm breathing[13] Ambient 6.32×10−5 10
Auditory threshold at 1 kHz[27] At ear 2.00×10−5 0
Anechoic chamber, Orfield Labs, A-weighted[29][30] Ambient 6.80×10−6 −9.4
Anechoic chamber, University of Salford, A-weighted[31] Ambient 4.80×10−6 −12.4
Anechoic chamber, Microsoft, A-weighted[32][33] Ambient 1.90×10−6 −20.35
  1. ^ All values listed are the effective sound pressure unless otherwise stated.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sound Pressure is the force of sound on a surface area perpendicular to the direction of the sound". Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b Wolfe, J. "What is acoustic impedance and why is it important?". University of New South Wales, Dept. of Physics, Music Acoustics. Retrieved 1 January 2014.
  3. ^ Longhurst, R. S. (1967). Geometrical and Physical Optics. Norwich: Longmans.
  4. ^ "Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology – Part 3: Logarithmic and related quantities, and their units", IEC 60027-3 Ed. 3.0, International Electrotechnical Commission, 19 July 2002.
  5. ^ Attenborough K, Postema M (2008). A pocket-sized introduction to acoustics. Kingston upon Hull: The University of Hull. doi:10.5281/zenodo.7504060. ISBN 978-90-812588-2-1.
  6. ^ Bies, David A., and Hansen, Colin. (2003). Engineering Noise Control.
  7. ^ Ross Roeser, Michael Valente, Audiology: Diagnosis (Thieme 2007), p. 240.
  8. ^ Thompson, A. and Taylor, B. N. Sec. 8.7: "Logarithmic quantities and units: level, neper, bel", Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI) 2008 Edition, NIST Special Publication 811, 2nd printing (November 2008), SP811 PDF.
  9. ^ Morfey, Christopher L. (2001). Dictionary of Acoustics. San Diego: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0125069403.
  10. ^ "Noise Terms Glossary". Retrieved 2012-10-14.
  11. ^ a b Self, Douglas (2020-04-17). Small Signal Audio Design. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-000-05044-8. this limit is reached when the rarefaction creates a vacuum, because you can't have a lower pressure than that. This corresponds to about +194 dB SPL.
  12. ^ a b Guignard, J. C.; King, P. F.; North Atlantic Treaty Organization Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development Aerospace Medical Panel (1972). Aeromedical Aspects of Vibration and Noise. North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development. In air at an assumed atmospheric pressure of 1 bar (100,000 N/m2) this occurs theoretically at approximately 191 dB SPL (working with rms values
  13. ^ a b c d e Winer, Ethan (2013). "1". The Audio Expert. New York and London: Focal Press. ISBN 978-0-240-82100-9.
  14. ^ HATAZAWA, Masayasu; SUGITA, Hiroshi; OGAWA, Takahiro; SEO, Yoshitoki (2004-01-01). "Performance of a Thermoacoustic Sound Wave Generator driven with Waste Heat of Automobile Gasoline Engine". Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers Series B. 70 (689): 292–299. doi:10.1299/kikaib.70.292. ISSN 0387-5016.
  15. ^ "Krakatoa Eruption - The Loudest Sound". Brüel & Kjær. Retrieved 2021-03-24. 160 km (99 miles) away from the source, registered a sound pressure level spike of more than 2½ inches of mercury (8.5 kPa), equivalent to 172 decibels.
  16. ^ Winchester, Simon (2003). Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded, August 27, 1883. Penguin/Viking. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-670-91430-2.
  17. ^ Flamme, GregoryA; Liebe, Kevin; Wong, Adam (2009). "Estimates of the auditory risk from outdoor impulse noise I: Firecrackers". Noise and Health. 11 (45): 223–230. doi:10.4103/1463-1741.56216. ISSN 1463-1741. PMID 19805932.
  18. ^ Brueck S. E., Kardous C. A., Oza A., Murphy W. J (2014). "NIOSH HHE Report No. 2013-0124-3208. Health hazard evaluation report: measurement of exposure to impulsive noise at indoor and outdoor firing ranges during tactical training exercises" (PDF). Cincinnati, OH: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ a b c d e f g "Did You Know How Loud Balloons Can Be?". Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  20. ^ "LRAD Corporation Product Overview for LRAD 1000Xi". Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  21. ^ a b Realistic Maximum Sound Pressure Levels for Dynamic Microphones – Shure.
  22. ^ Recording Brass & Reeds.
  23. ^ Swanepoel, De Wet; Hall III, James W.; Koekemoer, Dirk (February 2010). "Vuvuzela – good for your team, bad for your ears" (PDF). South African Medical Journal. 100 (4): 99–100. doi:10.7196/samj.3697. PMID 20459912.
  24. ^ Nave, Carl R. (2006). "Threshold of Pain". HyperPhysics. SciLinks. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  25. ^ Franks, John R.; Stephenson, Mark R.; Merry, Carol J., eds. (June 1996). Preventing Occupational Hearing Loss – A Practical Guide (PDF). National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. p. 88. Retrieved 2009-07-15.
  26. ^ "Decibel Table – SPL – Loudness Comparison Chart". sengpielaudio. Retrieved 5 Mar 2012.
  27. ^ a b William Hamby. "Ultimate Sound Pressure Level Decibel Table". from the original on 2005-10-19.
  28. ^ "EPA Identifies Noise Levels Affecting Health and Welfare" (Press release). Environmental Protection Agency. April 2, 1974. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  29. ^ ""THE QUIETEST PLACE ON EARTH" – GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS CERTIFICATE, 2005" (PDF). Orfield Labs.
  30. ^ Middlemiss, Neil (December 18, 2007). . Audio Junkies, Inc. Archived from the original on 2010-11-21.
  31. ^ Eustace, Dave. "Anechoic Chamber". University of Salford.
  32. ^ "Microsoft lab sets new record for the world's quietest place". 2015-10-02. Retrieved 2016-09-20. The computer company has built an anechoic chamber in which highly sensitive tests reported an average background noise reading of an unimaginably quiet −20.35 dBA (decibels A-weighted).
  33. ^ "Check out the world's quietest room". Microsoft: Inside B87. Retrieved 2016-09-20.
General
  • Beranek, Leo L., Acoustics (1993), Acoustical Society of America, ISBN 0-88318-494-X.
  • Daniel R. Raichel, The Science and Applications of Acoustics (2006), Springer New York, ISBN 1441920803.

External links

  •   Media related to Sound pressure at Wikimedia Commons
  • Sound Pressure and Sound Power, Effect and Cause
  • Conversion of Sound Pressure to Sound Pressure Level and Vice Versa
  • Table of Sound Levels, Corresponding Sound Pressure and Sound Intensity
  • Ohm's Law as Acoustic Equivalent, Calculations
  • Relationships of Acoustic Quantities Associated with a Plane Progressive Acoustic Sound Wave
  • Sound Pressure and Sound Power, Two Commonly Confused Characteristics of Sound
  • How Many Decibels Is Twice as Loud? Sound Level Change and the Respective Factor of Sound Pressure or Sound Intensity
  • Decibel (Loudness) Comparison Chart

sound, pressure, confused, with, sound, energy, density, acoustic, pressure, local, pressure, deviation, from, ambient, average, equilibrium, atmospheric, pressure, caused, sound, wave, sound, pressure, measured, using, microphone, water, with, hydrophone, uni. Not to be confused with Sound energy density Sound pressure or acoustic pressure is the local pressure deviation from the ambient average or equilibrium atmospheric pressure caused by a sound wave In air sound pressure can be measured using a microphone and in water with a hydrophone The SI unit of sound pressure is the pascal Pa 1 Sound measurementsCharacteristicSymbols Sound pressure p SPL LPA Particle velocity v SVL Particle displacement d Sound intensity I SIL Sound power P SWL LWA Sound energy W Sound energy density w Sound exposure E SEL Acoustic impedance Z Audio frequency AF Transmission loss TLvte Contents 1 Mathematical definition 2 Sound measurements 2 1 Sound intensity 2 2 Acoustic impedance 2 3 Particle displacement 3 Inverse proportional law 4 Sound pressure level 4 1 Examples 4 2 Distance 4 3 Multiple sources 5 Examples of sound pressure 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksMathematical definition Edit Sound pressure diagram silence audible sound atmospheric pressure sound pressure A sound wave in a transmission medium causes a deviation sound pressure a dynamic pressure in the local ambient pressure a static pressure Sound pressure denoted p is defined byp total p stat p displaystyle p text total p text stat p where ptotal is the total pressure pstat is the static pressure Sound measurements EditSound intensity Edit Main article Sound intensity In a sound wave the complementary variable to sound pressure is the particle velocity Together they determine the sound intensity of the wave Sound intensity denoted I and measured in W m 2 in SI units is defined byI p v displaystyle mathbf I p mathbf v where p is the sound pressure v is the particle velocity Acoustic impedance Edit Main article Acoustic impedance Acoustic impedance denoted Z and measured in Pa m 3 s in SI units is defined by 2 Z s p s Q s displaystyle Z s frac hat p s hat Q s where p s displaystyle hat p s is the Laplace transform of sound pressure citation needed Q s displaystyle hat Q s is the Laplace transform of sound volume flow rate Specific acoustic impedance denoted z and measured in Pa m 1 s in SI units is defined by 2 z s p s v s displaystyle z s frac hat p s hat v s where p s displaystyle hat p s is the Laplace transform of sound pressure v s displaystyle hat v s is the Laplace transform of particle velocity Particle displacement Edit Main article Particle displacement The particle displacement of a progressive sine wave is given byd r t d m cos k r w t f d 0 displaystyle delta mathbf r t delta text m cos mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t varphi delta 0 where d m displaystyle delta text m is the amplitude of the particle displacement f d 0 displaystyle varphi delta 0 is the phase shift of the particle displacement k is the angular wavevector w is the angular frequency It follows that the particle velocity and the sound pressure along the direction of propagation of the sound wave x are given byv r t d t r t w d m cos k r w t f d 0 p 2 v m cos k r w t f v 0 displaystyle v mathbf r t frac partial delta partial t mathbf r t omega delta text m cos left mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t varphi delta 0 frac pi 2 right v text m cos mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t varphi v 0 p r t r c 2 d x r t r c 2 k x d m cos k r w t f d 0 p 2 p m cos k r w t f p 0 displaystyle p mathbf r t rho c 2 frac partial delta partial x mathbf r t rho c 2 k x delta text m cos left mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t varphi delta 0 frac pi 2 right p text m cos mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t varphi p 0 where vm is the amplitude of the particle velocity f v 0 displaystyle varphi v 0 is the phase shift of the particle velocity pm is the amplitude of the acoustic pressure f p 0 displaystyle varphi p 0 is the phase shift of the acoustic pressure Taking the Laplace transforms of v and p with respect to time yieldsv r s v m s cos f v 0 w sin f v 0 s 2 w 2 displaystyle hat v mathbf r s v text m frac s cos varphi v 0 omega sin varphi v 0 s 2 omega 2 p r s p m s cos f p 0 w sin f p 0 s 2 w 2 displaystyle hat p mathbf r s p text m frac s cos varphi p 0 omega sin varphi p 0 s 2 omega 2 Since f v 0 f p 0 displaystyle varphi v 0 varphi p 0 the amplitude of the specific acoustic impedance is given byz m r s z r s p r s v r s p m v m r c 2 k x w displaystyle z text m mathbf r s z mathbf r s left frac hat p mathbf r s hat v mathbf r s right frac p text m v text m frac rho c 2 k x omega Consequently the amplitude of the particle displacement is related to that of the acoustic velocity and the sound pressure byd m v m w displaystyle delta text m frac v text m omega d m p m w z m r s displaystyle delta text m frac p text m omega z text m mathbf r s Inverse proportional law EditFurther information Inverse square law When measuring the sound pressure created by a sound source it is important to measure the distance from the object as well since the sound pressure of a spherical sound wave decreases as 1 r from the centre of the sphere and not as 1 r2 like the sound intensity 3 p r 1 r displaystyle p r propto frac 1 r This relationship is an inverse proportional law If the sound pressure p1 is measured at a distance r1 from the centre of the sphere the sound pressure p2 at another position r2 can be calculated p 2 r 1 r 2 p 1 displaystyle p 2 frac r 1 r 2 p 1 The inverse proportional law for sound pressure comes from the inverse square law for sound intensity I r 1 r 2 displaystyle I r propto frac 1 r 2 Indeed I r p r v r p r p z 1 r p 2 r displaystyle I r p r v r p r left p z 1 right r propto p 2 r where displaystyle is the convolution operator z 1 is the convolution inverse of the specific acoustic impedance hence the inverse proportional law p r 1 r displaystyle p r propto frac 1 r The sound pressure may vary in direction from the centre of the sphere as well so measurements at different angles may be necessary depending on the situation An obvious example of a sound source whose spherical sound wave varies in level in different directions is a bullhorn citation needed Sound pressure level EditFor other uses see Sound level Sound pressure level SPL or acoustic pressure level is a logarithmic measure of the effective pressure of a sound relative to a reference value Sound pressure level denoted Lp and measured in dB 4 is defined by 5 L p ln p p 0 Np 2 log 10 p p 0 B 20 log 10 p p 0 dB displaystyle L p ln left frac p p 0 right text Np 2 log 10 left frac p p 0 right text B 20 log 10 left frac p p 0 right text dB where p is the root mean square sound pressure 6 p0 is a reference sound pressure 1 Np is the neper 1 B 1 2 ln 10 Np is the bel 1 dB 1 20 ln 10 Np is the decibel The commonly used reference sound pressure in air is 7 p0 20 mPa which is often considered as the threshold of human hearing roughly the sound of a mosquito flying 3 m away The proper notations for sound pressure level using this reference are Lp 20 mPa or Lp re 20 mPa but the suffix notations dB SPL dB SPL dBSPL or dBSPL are very common even if they are not accepted by the SI 8 Most sound level measurements will be made relative to this reference meaning 1 Pa will equal an SPL of 94 dB In other media such as underwater a reference level of 1 mPa is used 9 These references are defined in ANSI S1 1 2013 10 The main instrument for measuring sound levels in the environment is the sound level meter Most sound level meters provide readings in A C and Z weighted decibels and must meet international standards such as IEC 61672 2013 Examples Edit The lower limit of audibility is defined as SPL of 0 dB but the upper limit is not as clearly defined While 1 atm 194 dB peak or 191 dB SPL 11 12 is the largest pressure variation an undistorted sound wave can have in Earth s atmosphere i e if the thermodynamic properties of the air are disregarded in reality the sound waves become progressively non linear starting over 150 dB larger sound waves can be present in other atmospheres or other media such as underwater or through the Earth 13 Equal loudness contour showing sound pressure vs frequency at different perceived loudness levels Ears detect changes in sound pressure Human hearing does not have a flat spectral sensitivity frequency response relative to frequency versus amplitude Humans do not perceive low and high frequency sounds as well as they perceive sounds between 3 000 and 4 000 Hz as shown in the equal loudness contour Because the frequency response of human hearing changes with amplitude three weightings have been established for measuring sound pressure A B and C In order to distinguish the different sound measures a suffix is used A weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBA or LA B weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBB or LB and C weighted sound pressure level is written either as dBC or LC Unweighted sound pressure level is called linear sound pressure level and is often written as dBL or just L Some sound measuring instruments use the letter Z as an indication of linear SPL 13 Distance Edit The distance of the measuring microphone from a sound source is often omitted when SPL measurements are quoted making the data useless due to the inherent effect of the inverse proportional law In the case of ambient environmental measurements of background noise distance need not be quoted as no single source is present but when measuring the noise level of a specific piece of equipment the distance should always be stated A distance of one metre 1 m from the source is a frequently used standard distance Because of the effects of reflected noise within a closed room the use of an anechoic chamber allows sound to be comparable to measurements made in a free field environment 13 According to the inverse proportional law when sound level Lp1 is measured at a distance r1 the sound level Lp2 at the distance r2 isL p 2 L p 1 20 log 10 r 1 r 2 dB displaystyle L p 2 L p 1 20 log 10 left frac r 1 r 2 right text dB Multiple sources Edit The formula for the sum of the sound pressure levels of n incoherent radiating sources isL S 10 log 10 p 1 2 p 2 2 p n 2 p 0 2 dB 10 log 10 p 1 p 0 2 p 2 p 0 2 p n p 0 2 dB displaystyle L Sigma 10 log 10 left frac p 1 2 p 2 2 dots p n 2 p 0 2 right text dB 10 log 10 left left frac p 1 p 0 right 2 left frac p 2 p 0 right 2 dots left frac p n p 0 right 2 right text dB Inserting the formulas p i p 0 2 10 L i 10 dB i 1 2 n displaystyle left frac p i p 0 right 2 10 frac L i 10 text dB quad i 1 2 ldots n in the formula for the sum of the sound pressure levels yields L S 10 log 10 10 L 1 10 dB 10 L 2 10 dB 10 L n 10 dB dB displaystyle L Sigma 10 log 10 left 10 frac L 1 10 text dB 10 frac L 2 10 text dB dots 10 frac L n 10 text dB right text dB Examples of sound pressure EditExamples of sound pressure in air at standard atmospheric pressure Source of sound Distance Sound pressure level a Pa dBSPL Shock wave distorted sound waves gt 1 atm waveform valleys are clipped at zero pressure 11 12 gt 1 01 105 gt 191Simple open ended thermoacoustic device 14 clarification needed 1 26 104 1761883 eruption of Krakatoa 15 16 165 km 172 30 06 rifle being fired 1 m toshooter s side 7 09 103 171Firecracker 17 0 5 m 7 09 103 171Stun grenade 18 Ambient 1 60 103 8 00 103 158 1729 inch 23 cm party balloon inflated to rupture 19 At ear 4 92 103 1689 inch 23 cm diameter balloon crushed to rupture 19 At ear 1 79 103 1599 inch 23 cm party balloon inflated to rupture 19 0 5 m 1 42 103 1579 inch 23 cm diameter balloon popped with a pin 19 At ear 1 13 103 155LRAD 1000Xi Long Range Acoustic Device 20 1 m 8 93 102 1539 inch 23 cm party balloon inflated to rupture 19 1 m 731 151Jet engine 13 1 m 632 1509 inch 23 cm diameter balloon crushed to rupture 19 0 95 m 448 1479 inch 23 cm diameter balloon popped with a pin 19 1 m 282 5 143Loudest human voice 21 1 inch 110 135Trumpet 22 0 5 m 63 2 130Vuvuzela horn 23 1 m 20 0 120Threshold of pain 24 25 21 At ear 20 200 120 140Risk of instantaneous noise induced hearing loss At ear 20 0 120Jet engine 100 30 m 6 32 200 110 140Two stroke chainsaw 26 1 m 6 32 110Jackhammer 1 m 2 00 100Traffic on a busy roadway 10 m 0 20 0 63 80 90Hearing damage over long term exposure need not be continuous 27 At ear 0 36 85Passenger car 10 m 0 02 0 20 60 80EPA identified maximum to protect against hearing loss and other disruptive effects from noise such as sleep disturbance stress learning detriment etc 28 Ambient 0 06 70TV set at home level 1 m 0 02 60Normal conversation 1 m 2 10 3 0 02 40 60Very calm room Ambient 2 00 10 4 6 32 10 4 20 30Light leaf rustling calm breathing 13 Ambient 6 32 10 5 10Auditory threshold at 1 kHz 27 At ear 2 00 10 5 0Anechoic chamber Orfield Labs A weighted 29 30 Ambient 6 80 10 6 9 4Anechoic chamber University of Salford A weighted 31 Ambient 4 80 10 6 12 4Anechoic chamber Microsoft A weighted 32 33 Ambient 1 90 10 6 20 35 All values listed are the effective sound pressure unless otherwise stated See also EditAcoustics Phon unit Loudness Sone unit Sound level meter Stevens s power law Weber Fechner law especially The case of soundReferences Edit Sound Pressure is the force of sound on a surface area perpendicular to the direction of the sound Retrieved 22 April 2015 a b Wolfe J What is acoustic impedance and why is it important University of New South Wales Dept of Physics Music Acoustics Retrieved 1 January 2014 Longhurst R S 1967 Geometrical and Physical Optics Norwich Longmans Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology Part 3 Logarithmic and related quantities and their units IEC 60027 3 Ed 3 0 International Electrotechnical Commission 19 July 2002 Attenborough K Postema M 2008 A pocket sized introduction to acoustics Kingston upon Hull The University of Hull doi 10 5281 zenodo 7504060 ISBN 978 90 812588 2 1 Bies David A and Hansen Colin 2003 Engineering Noise Control Ross Roeser Michael Valente Audiology Diagnosis Thieme 2007 p 240 Thompson A and Taylor B N Sec 8 7 Logarithmic quantities and units level neper bel Guide for the Use of the International System of Units SI 2008 Edition NIST Special Publication 811 2nd printing November 2008 SP811 PDF Morfey Christopher L 2001 Dictionary of Acoustics San Diego Academic Press ISBN 978 0125069403 Noise Terms Glossary Retrieved 2012 10 14 a b Self Douglas 2020 04 17 Small Signal Audio Design CRC Press ISBN 978 1 000 05044 8 this limit is reached when the rarefaction creates a vacuum because you can t have a lower pressure than that This corresponds to about 194 dB SPL a b Guignard J C King P F North Atlantic Treaty Organization Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development Aerospace Medical Panel 1972 Aeromedical Aspects of Vibration and Noise North Atlantic Treaty Organization Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development In air at an assumed atmospheric pressure of 1 bar 100 000 N m2 this occurs theoretically at approximately 191 dB SPL working with rms values a b c d e Winer Ethan 2013 1 The Audio Expert New York and London Focal Press ISBN 978 0 240 82100 9 HATAZAWA Masayasu SUGITA Hiroshi OGAWA Takahiro SEO Yoshitoki 2004 01 01 Performance of a Thermoacoustic Sound Wave Generator driven with Waste Heat of Automobile Gasoline Engine Transactions of the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers Series B 70 689 292 299 doi 10 1299 kikaib 70 292 ISSN 0387 5016 Krakatoa Eruption The Loudest Sound Bruel amp Kjaer Retrieved 2021 03 24 160 km 99 miles away from the source registered a sound pressure level spike of more than 2 inches of mercury 8 5 kPa equivalent to 172 decibels Winchester Simon 2003 Krakatoa The Day the World Exploded August 27 1883 Penguin Viking p 218 ISBN 978 0 670 91430 2 Flamme GregoryA Liebe Kevin Wong Adam 2009 Estimates of the auditory risk from outdoor impulse noise I Firecrackers Noise and Health 11 45 223 230 doi 10 4103 1463 1741 56216 ISSN 1463 1741 PMID 19805932 Brueck S E Kardous C A Oza A Murphy W J 2014 NIOSH HHE Report No 2013 0124 3208 Health hazard evaluation report measurement of exposure to impulsive noise at indoor and outdoor firing ranges during tactical training exercises PDF Cincinnati OH U S Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g Did You Know How Loud Balloons Can Be Retrieved 8 June 2018 LRAD Corporation Product Overview for LRAD 1000Xi Retrieved 29 May 2014 a b Realistic Maximum Sound Pressure Levels for Dynamic Microphones Shure Recording Brass amp Reeds Swanepoel De Wet Hall III James W Koekemoer Dirk February 2010 Vuvuzela good for your team bad for your ears PDF South African Medical Journal 100 4 99 100 doi 10 7196 samj 3697 PMID 20459912 Nave Carl R 2006 Threshold of Pain HyperPhysics SciLinks Retrieved 2009 06 16 Franks John R Stephenson Mark R Merry Carol J eds June 1996 Preventing Occupational Hearing Loss A Practical Guide PDF National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 88 Retrieved 2009 07 15 Decibel Table SPL Loudness Comparison Chart sengpielaudio Retrieved 5 Mar 2012 a b William Hamby Ultimate Sound Pressure Level Decibel Table Archived from the original on 2005 10 19 EPA Identifies Noise Levels Affecting Health and Welfare Press release Environmental Protection Agency April 2 1974 Retrieved March 27 2017 THE QUIETEST PLACE ON EARTH GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS CERTIFICATE 2005 PDF Orfield Labs Middlemiss Neil December 18 2007 The Quietest Place on Earth Orfield Labs Audio Junkies Inc Archived from the original on 2010 11 21 Eustace Dave Anechoic Chamber University of Salford Microsoft lab sets new record for the world s quietest place 2015 10 02 Retrieved 2016 09 20 The computer company has built an anechoic chamber in which highly sensitive tests reported an average background noise reading of an unimaginably quiet 20 35 dBA decibels A weighted Check out the world s quietest room Microsoft Inside B87 Retrieved 2016 09 20 GeneralBeranek Leo L Acoustics 1993 Acoustical Society of America ISBN 0 88318 494 X Daniel R Raichel The Science and Applications of Acoustics 2006 Springer New York ISBN 1441920803 External links Edit Media related to Sound pressure at Wikimedia Commons Sound Pressure and Sound Power Effect and Cause Conversion of Sound Pressure to Sound Pressure Level and Vice Versa Table of Sound Levels Corresponding Sound Pressure and Sound Intensity Ohm s Law as Acoustic Equivalent Calculations Relationships of Acoustic Quantities Associated with a Plane Progressive Acoustic Sound Wave Sound Pressure and Sound Power Two Commonly Confused Characteristics of Sound How Many Decibels Is Twice as Loud Sound Level Change and the Respective Factor of Sound Pressure or Sound Intensity Decibel Loudness Comparison Chart Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sound pressure amp oldid 1141794413, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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