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The Quietest Sound Possible & The Quietest Sound Ever Recorded/Measured |
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| Jun10-12, 06:29 AM | #1 |
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The Quietest Sound Possible & The Quietest Sound Ever Recorded/Measured
Apparently, there is a limit to the maximum sound amplitude that depends on the medium in which the sound in question travels. In the atmosphere, the limit is supposedly around 194 Db, arising from the fact that in sound above this level, the pressure throughs would exceed atmospheric pressure and there can be no negative absolute pressure, so the throughs would be cut-off, which means the pressure waves would no longer have sinusoid waveform (I guess it could be argued that they are still sound).
What I am wondering about is if there is a limit on the other end of the scale (if so, it would probably also be medium dependent) and if so, what is it and why is it there? Young children can supposedly hear up to -5 Db or even -10 Db at certain frequencies and some animals can apparently beat even that (my internet searches yielded -10 Db, -15 Db or even close to - 20 Db peak sensitivity for cats), so if there is a lower limit it must lie somewhere below that. One source had some owl hearing sensitivity pegged at between -90 and -100 Db, but I found no other source to corroborate it and other sources yielded owl sensitivities somewhere in the cat range I described above. Unfortunately, I did not manage to find the lowest sound recorded by human-made equipment, so that yielded no clues at all. I would presume that below some amplitude of vibration, the air molecules no longer reach each other to propagate the sound, so that would provide some sort of lower limit and random effects might drown out any sound before that, but that is just my speculation and I don't know what decibel limits (assuming my speculation is even correct) this would impose in the atmosphere. Anyway, I have been wondering about this for a while and have finally decided to ask some experts, so I registered here and voila this is my first post. I am hoping somebody here can shed some light on the matter. Thanks! |
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| Jun10-12, 12:35 PM | #2 |
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Well, gas consists of individual particles with chaotic motion. Therefore, the noise of these individual particles can be considered as a lower limit for sound - every sound intensity below that will be smaller than the random noise.
In resistors, this can be measured. I am not so sure about air. |
| Jun10-12, 12:42 PM | #3 |
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| Jun11-12, 02:53 AM | #4 |
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The Quietest Sound Possible & The Quietest Sound Ever Recorded/Measured
OK, so the random Brownian motion of particles is probably where the lower limit of sound probably lies. Fair enough - does anybody know what that would be converted to decibels and how low did we manage to get as far as measurement goes with our instrumentation?
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| Jun11-12, 10:35 AM | #5 |
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I think you have to constrain the problem a little more by picking a frequency, like [itex]\nu[/itex]=262 hz (about middle C) and asking "whats the quietest middle C I can measure?" Then you have to think about the bandwidth of your microphone. The amount of noise it detects is proportional to the bandwidth. If you had a bandwidth function that was a delta function (zero width), then I guess you could theoretically have zero noise and you could measure any level of middle C. So I guess the question of what is the quietest middle C you can measure boils down to what's the smallest bandwidth microphone I can design? Then you can figure out the noise level, and that would be about the quietest middle C you could measure. I don't know enough about microphones to know what that smallest bandwidth is. |
| Jun11-12, 10:51 AM | #6 |
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| Jun11-12, 11:01 AM | #7 |
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You can use this online calculator to convert sound dB levels so sound pressure (Pascals) or watts per square meter. For example, 0 dB (SPL) = 0.00002 Pascals, or 1 x 10-12 watts per square meter.
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-soundlevel.htm This anechoic chamber, at -9.4 dB, is deemed the "Quietest place on Earth" http://www.tcbmag.com/industriestren.../104458p1.aspx The lowest possible external (to microphone) sound level might be the random motion of air molecules at 300 kelvin. |
| Jun11-12, 04:28 PM | #8 |
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The notion of 'minimum sound level' should really relate to 'minimum detectable sound level', I think. Once you introduce the idea of detecting the sound then you are into the realms of Signal to Noise Ratio, and that will involve the bandwidth used for the measurement. So, with a sufficiently narrow band filter, the noise power admitted into the detector can be reduced to a level at which an arbitrarily low signal can still be detected (as with radio and other signals).
In the end, what counts is the statistics of spotting a regular (known /wanted) variation in amongst random variations (noise / random thermal motion of the air molecules) and just how long your measurement needs to take before you can say the sound is there or not there. |
| Jun11-12, 10:28 PM | #9 |
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That's right. I have read that if human hearing were any more sensitive we would be able to hear the Brownian motion of the eardrum. But it would still be possible to hear sounds below this level with statistical methods. The quieter the sound, the more data you would need to detect it with some level of confidence. Eventually the interval would become impractical. The other thing is that cats and owls don't really need to "hear" the sound. They just want to identify a mouse and figure out where it is. |
| Jun11-12, 11:25 PM | #10 |
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| Jun12-12, 01:57 AM | #11 |
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If your signal is y(t) and its frequency f, you need to average sin (2 pi f t) * y[t] for a number of frequencies around the signal frequency to check that the signal is present and bigger than the noise at that frequency. |
| Jun12-12, 03:20 AM | #12 |
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It is the noise Power added to your signal in a given bandwidth that counts. It doesn't matter if there is a high 'spike' now and again as long as you can average it out (filtering). You'll still be able to be sure whether your wanted signal is there or not. |
| Jun12-12, 05:38 AM | #13 |
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This is a really interesting discussion. So it seems, Brownian motion is not really as limiting at the lower end of the sound amplitude scale as I thought it would be... That's unexpected, but certainly exciting.
At the very least, assuming space is quantized, there is a limit on molecule displacement based on Planck's length, which would limit minimum possible sound, but surely there would be limits long before that and certainly there would be detection limits way, way before that. I guess the random motion of molecules isn't one of these limits though... |
| Jun12-12, 05:49 AM | #14 |
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Most sources I have come across on the web pegged cat and owl hearing at about -15 dB to -20 dB at best, though I have seen one source that ascribed peak hearing sensitivity better than -90 dB to the barn owl (but I haven't seen this corroborated by any other source and it seems pretty ridiculous - think about it: a sensitivity to sound pressures 100 million times smaller than those detectable by young children or about 1 billion times smaller than those detectable by adult humans... yeah, I highly doubt the credibility of that). |
| Jun12-12, 08:16 AM | #15 |
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If Owls don't need to 'hear' music, speech and mains hum then they can also have more frequency selective hearing - which makes their hearing more sensitive in a narrow band. The comments about brownian motion are, in effect, about random noise additions to the signal. Hearing is just another example of a communications / measurement channel and the same concepts apply. |
| Jun12-12, 12:17 PM | #16 |
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Using http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-soundlevel.htm to convert 0 dB(SPL) to power, we get 1 x 10-12 watts per square meter, or 1 x 10-15 milliwatts per square mm. The quietest sound possible in the aneochic chamber is ≈ -10 dB(SPL), so the ear does not need to be any better than ≈ 1 x 10-16 milliwatts per square mm for a 1 mm2 ear. The thermal noise limit in electrical circuits (and perhaps also biological circuits) is kTB= 4 x 10-15 milliwatts per kHz (= -144 dBm/kHz*). So how good does the ear need to be (in milliwatts per kHz) before it reaches the thermal noise limit? * 0 dBm is 1 milliwatt. A good microwave receiver is ≈ kTB + 3 dB = -111 dBm/MHz. |
| Jun12-12, 04:01 PM | #17 |
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Bob S
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