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niko2000
Oct10-04, 01:03 PM
Hi,
I'm wondering If we could generate homogeneous sound field and if we put two sound sources which would have inverse phaze we could attain silence.
Is it possible to do that?
Is it possible to generate homogeneous sound field in a room full of moving objects (people)?
Regards,
Niko

Erazman
Oct10-04, 01:11 PM
isnt that how a muffler works?

Erazman
Oct10-04, 01:12 PM
n/m i misread the question

niko2000
Oct10-04, 01:15 PM
Yes, but that sound isn't much complex. Actually I was tinking about realizing a room with two melodies playing each in a part of room without mutual disturbance.

Necrosis
Oct10-04, 07:57 PM
you watched batman beyond didn't you....:P

To be truthfull, I can't help you, I just couldn't resist posting though...;)

HallsofIvy
Oct10-04, 08:07 PM
Theoretically, you could but only at the point exactly midway between the two speakers but nowhere else and not if there were objects between.

NoTime
Oct10-04, 09:33 PM
two sound sources which would have inverse phaze we could attain silence.
Is it possible to do that?They do sell earphones that work fairly well using active sound cancelation.

Alkatran
Oct11-04, 10:04 AM
Theoretically, you could but only at the point exactly midway between the two speakers but nowhere else and not if there were objects between.

You could do it at any point. The problem is making it work for all points.

HallsofIvy
Oct11-04, 10:22 AM
They do sell earphones that work fairly well using active sound cancelation.

I remember a science fiction in which a person built a machine that would analyze incoming sound waves and broad cast a "cancelling" signal. Of course that couldn't work. it would be already "too late" for points between the sound source and the machine and even for points further down the line, the fact that it would require some time to analyze means that the machine would not be able to cancel the sound.

In the story, teenager who were deprived of the rock and roll constantly in their ears (today, rap?) found they had to actually THINK and, of course, immediately went crazy!

Alkatran
Oct11-04, 10:26 AM
I remember a science fiction in which a person built a machine that would analyze incoming sound waves and broad cast a "cancelling" signal. Of course that couldn't work. it would be already "too late" for points between the sound source and the machine and even for points further down the line, the fact that it would require some time to analyze means that the machine would not be able to cancel the sound.

Well the machine would analyze at one end and broadcast at the other. Too bad the 'cancelling' sphere and 'actual' sphere for the sounds could never exactly match up... and you'd just end up doubling the noise.

LURCH
Oct15-04, 10:47 PM
I remember a science fiction in which a person built a machine that would analyze incoming sound waves and broad cast a "cancelling" signal. Of course that couldn't work. it would be already "too late" for points between the sound source and the machine and even for points further down the line, the fact that it would require some time to analyze means that the machine would not be able to cancel the sound.

In the story, teenager who were deprived of the rock and roll constantly in their ears (today, rap?) found they had to actually THINK and, of course, immediately went crazy!

Thsi sounds similar to the earphones NoTime mentioned; they are no longer science fiction, and as some have been made. Last I heard, there was talk of making them standard issue for airport employees, but I don't think their use is very widesperad, ATM.

russ_watters
Oct15-04, 11:13 PM
Ain't technology great: Google: noice cancellation headphones (http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&q=noise+cancellation+headphones)? Its not star trek, guys, its for real and the technology isn't all that complicated (though its still pretty cool).

Halls - midway between the two speakers is exactly where you locate your head between headphones. Also, the speed of sound is slow compared with the processing speed of computers. No, you can't cancel out the cycle that's being analyzed, but the next one or the one after that you can. So it works great for relatively constant sounds - the primary application of this is airplanes.First, tiny microphones, one on each earpiece, detect ambient noise before it gets to your ears. Then the noise-cancellation circuitry, usually housed in an external module, essentially inverts the captured signal, turning the noise's sound wave upside down. Before you know it, the noise-cancellation system adds the sonic opposite of the external noise to whatever you're listening to, thereby eliminating most of the pollution and leaving you with just your music.