Inverse Square Law Explained

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @LuigiChelli
    @LuigiChelli ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Actually the energy becomes one fourth, it's the sound pressure level that becomes a half

    • @pim_kahlert
      @pim_kahlert ปีที่แล้ว

      Looking for this, thank you for educating!

    • @MichaelCurtisAudio
      @MichaelCurtisAudio  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Great point, thanks for the clarity on word choice.

    • @LuigiChelli
      @LuigiChelli ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@MichaelCurtisAudio I think basically everybody in audio have this misconception, i only figured it out when learning photography where per doubling of the distance light loses two 'stops' (each stop being a halving) 😅

  • @p3ter9000
    @p3ter9000 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The inverse-square actually means that double distance will make the sound 1/4 as loud. At triple distance, it will be 1/9 as loud. Inverse-square refers literally to 1/r^2
    What's happening here is that decibels are a logarithmic unit, meaning that each unit change stands for a multiplication of intensity, not an addition. The -6 dB between mics means that each mic is detecting 25% of the sound intensity of the others.

    • @joelloyd2936
      @joelloyd2936 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      well yea but 25% sound intensity does not mean it will be 1/4 as loud

  • @isaacokunola9073
    @isaacokunola9073 ปีที่แล้ว

    How do you do your subtitles

  • @lucil3689
    @lucil3689 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We lose three quarters not one half. If you double the radius of a sphere its surface increases four times.

  • @vanRossi
    @vanRossi ปีที่แล้ว +2

    To what reference? Let's say I am one millimeter away from the speaker and I double the distance to two millimeters, this is obviously not -6dB?

    • @mitas3484
      @mitas3484 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Actually it would, but obviously at a much smaller scale. If you consider your AirPods as an example, moving them just 1mm out of your ear it will greatly impact the audio volume. It’s the same with all speakers, but 1mm at this scale would be inside the cone movement, that being said physics is physics.

    • @vanRossi
      @vanRossi ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mitas3484 I am not teasing you, I really want to understand this. If I take my 1mm as reference point and double that 10 times I would be 1.024mm away, so roughly 1 meter /3 feet away. -60dB would be practically nothing. So. You did your video with feet since you are in the US. I am used to metric, so how do I adjust to that?

    • @mitas3484
      @mitas3484 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@vanRossi it’s physics, so it’s independent of measurement type. You can use 1 meter to 2 meter, and 2 to 4 meter. Each doubling will see -6 dB decrease.
      In your example, try turning up your headphones to max volume and put a db meter inside. It may measure 110 db at 1mm, and may be almost exactly 50db at 1 meter away.
      If you measure a speaker at 1 meter, and double it to 2 meter it would be -6db, and this is a logarithmic scale. So the further away you get, the less impact on volume it will have. This is why you sometimes can hear concerts from kilometers away.

    • @nathanaelwelch3551
      @nathanaelwelch3551 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This might not be intuitive because arrays of speakers must be summed across the field of projected sound.
      Isolated sound could (theoretically) be quieter. This might be how you're thinking it's not intuitive. Things get complicated when variables are maxed out or minimized.

    • @pim_kahlert
      @pim_kahlert ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This is true for a point source and in the far field you can consider a speaker a point source. This means you should preferably at least have a 5 times distance from a speaker compared to it's diameter. For a woofer with a 10cm diameter this will work going from 1m to 2m. For an 21" woofer, you'll barely measure a difference going from 10cm to 20cm.
      So for it to work on a mm scale you should have a point source smaller than about 0.2mm.
      For speakers with multiple drivers the far field would be about 5 times the longest distance between driver edges.
      With 15m high line arrays the droppoff is also not 6dB per doubling until you're 30-50m away due to the accoustic coupling which makes it act more as a line source rather than a point source.

  • @loritagermana2325
    @loritagermana2325 ปีที่แล้ว

    🌹 "Promosm"