How Can Multiple Microphones Locate a Distant Sound Source?

  • Thread starter Thread starter apepi
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Sound Source
apepi
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Not sure which section to post this in, but here goes. It's entirely my own words - might look like homework but it's for electronics.
Multiple microphones are connected to a computer. A sudden sound, like a gunshot, goes off in the distance. These microphones are separated from each other by a known distance, and the time of arrival of the gunshot sound is known for all microphones.
The computer also knows the speed of sound, but it does not know the exact time the noise was made, nor the original frequency, ruling out Doppler Effect calculations.
Any suggestions for an algorithm or minimum amount of microphones? I've been looking for methods, like sound ranging etc, but I've come to naught.
Thanks for any help
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I think it's three microphones - not co-linear.
IIRC: two will give you a line of possible locations. The third will give you three lines. They should intersect.

If the gunshot was at point G, and you have two microphones at P and Q, then a shot heard at t_P and t_Q at each detector started out on a line so that the path difference is c|t_P-t_Q|.
 
Multilateration it is, then. Thanks for the help
 
Hello! There is a simple line in the textbook. If ##S## is a manifold, an injectively immersed submanifold ##M## of ##S## is embedded if and only if ##M## is locally closed in ##S##. Recall the definition. M is locally closed if for each point ##x\in M## there open ##U\subset S## such that ##M\cap U## is closed in ##U##. Embedding to injective immesion is simple. The opposite direction is hard. Suppose I have ##N## as source manifold and ##f:N\rightarrow S## is the injective...
Back
Top