సౌండ్ కన్వర్టర్
Understanding Sound Measurement: Decibels, Pressure, and the Science of Acoustics
Sound measurement combines physics, mathematics, and human perception to quantify what we hear. From the threshold of hearing at 0 dB to the painful intensity of jet engines at 140 dB, understanding sound units is essential for audio engineering, occupational safety, environmental monitoring, and acoustics design. This guide covers decibels, sound pressure, intensity, psychoacoustic units, and their practical applications in professional work.
Fundamental Concepts: The Physics of Sound
Decibel (dB SPL)
Logarithmic unit measuring sound pressure level
dB SPL (Sound Pressure Level) measures sound pressure relative to 20 µPa, the threshold of human hearing. The logarithmic scale means +10 dB = 10× pressure increase, +20 dB = 100× pressure increase, but only 2× perceived loudness due to human hearing nonlinearity.
Example: Conversation at 60 dB has 1000× more pressure than hearing threshold at 0 dB, but sounds only 16× louder subjectively.
Sound Pressure (Pascal)
Physical force per area exerted by sound waves
Sound pressure is the instantaneous pressure variation caused by a sound wave, measured in pascals (Pa). It varies from 20 µPa (barely audible) to 200 Pa (painfully loud). The RMS (root mean square) pressure is typically reported for continuous sounds.
Example: Normal speech creates 0.02 Pa (63 dB). A rock concert reaches 2 Pa (100 dB)—100× higher pressure but only 6× louder perceptually.
Sound Intensity (W/m²)
Acoustic power per unit area
Sound intensity measures acoustic energy flow through a surface, in watts per square meter. It relates to pressure² and is fundamental in calculating sound power. The threshold of hearing is 10⁻¹² W/m², while a jet engine produces 1 W/m² at close range.
Example: Whisper has 10⁻¹⁰ W/m² intensity (20 dB). Threshold of pain is 1 W/m² (120 dB)—1 trillion times more intense.
- 0 dB SPL = 20 µPa (threshold of hearing), not silence—reference point
- Every +10 dB = 10× pressure increase, but only 2× perceived loudness
- dB scale is logarithmic: 60 dB + 60 dB ≠ 120 dB (adds to 63 dB!)
- Human hearing spans 0-140 dB (1:10 million pressure ratio)
- Sound pressure ≠ loudness: 100 Hz needs more dB than 1 kHz to sound equally loud
- Negative dB values possible for sounds quieter than reference (e.g., -10 dB = 6.3 µPa)
Historical Evolution of Sound Measurement
1877
Phonograph Invented
Thomas Edison invents the phonograph, enabling the first recordings and playback of sound, sparking interest in quantifying audio levels.
1920s
Decibel Introduced
Bell Telephone Laboratories introduces the decibel for measuring transmission loss in telephone cables. Named after Alexander Graham Bell, it quickly becomes standard for audio measurement.
1933
Fletcher-Munson Curves
Harvey Fletcher and Wilden A. Munson publish equal-loudness contours showing frequency-dependent hearing sensitivity, laying groundwork for A-weighting and phon scale.
1936
Sound Level Meter
First commercial sound level meter developed, standardizing noise measurement for industrial and environmental applications.
1959
Sone Scale Standardized
Stanley Smith Stevens formalizes the sone scale (ISO 532), providing a linear measure of perceived loudness where doubling sones = doubling perceived loudness.
1970
OSHA Standards
US Occupational Safety and Health Administration establishes noise exposure limits (85-90 dB TWA), making sound measurement critical for workplace safety.
2003
ISO 226 Revision
Updated equal-loudness contours based on modern research, refining phon measurements and A-weighting accuracy across frequencies.
2010s
Digital Audio Standards
LUFS (Loudness Units relative to Full Scale) standardized for broadcast and streaming, replacing peak-only measurements with perceptually-based loudness metering.
Memory Aids & Quick Reference
Quick Mental Math
- **+3 dB = doubling power** (barely noticeable to most people)
- **+6 dB = doubling pressure** (inverse square law, halving distance)
- **+10 dB ≈ 2× louder** (perceived loudness doubles)
- **+20 dB = 10× pressure** (two decades on log scale)
- **60 dB SPL ≈ normal conversation** (at 1 meter distance)
- **85 dB = OSHA 8-hour limit** (hearing protection threshold)
- **120 dB = threshold of pain** (immediate discomfort)
Decibel Addition Rules
- **Equal sources:** 80 dB + 80 dB = 83 dB (not 160!)
- **10 dB apart:** 90 dB + 80 dB ≈ 90.4 dB (quieter source barely matters)
- **20 dB apart:** 90 dB + 70 dB ≈ 90.04 dB (negligible contribution)
- **Doubling sources:** N equal sources = original + 10×log₁₀(N) dB
- **10 equal 80 dB sources = 90 dB total** (not 800 dB!)
Memorize These Reference Points
- **0 dB SPL** = 20 µPa = threshold of hearing
- **20 dB** = whisper, quiet library
- **60 dB** = normal conversation, office
- **85 dB** = heavy traffic, hearing risk
- **100 dB** = nightclub, chainsaw
- **120 dB** = rock concert, thunder
- **140 dB** = gunshot, jet engine nearby
- **194 dB** = theoretical max in atmosphere
Avoid These Mistakes
- **Never add dB arithmetically** — use logarithmic addition formulas
- **dBA ≠ dB SPL** — A-weighting reduces bass, no direct conversion possible
- **Distance doubling** ≠ half the level (it's -6 dB, not -50%)
- **3 dB barely noticeable,** not 3× louder — perception is logarithmic
- **0 dB ≠ silence** — it's the reference point (20 µPa), can go negative
- **phon ≠ dB** except at 1 kHz — frequency-dependent equal loudness
Quick Conversion Examples
The Logarithmic Scale: Why Decibels Work
Sound spans an enormous range—the loudest sound we can tolerate is 10 million times more powerful than the quietest. A linear scale would be impractical. The logarithmic decibel scale compresses this range and matches how our ears perceive sound changes.
Why Logarithmic?
Three reasons make logarithmic measurement essential:
- Human perception: Ears respond logarithmically—doubling pressure sounds like +6 dB, not 2×
- Range compression: 0-140 dB vs 20 µPa - 200 Pa (impractical for daily use)
- Multiplication becomes addition: Combining sound sources uses simple addition
- Natural scaling: Factors of 10 become equal steps (20 dB, 30 dB, 40 dB...)
Common Logarithmic Mistakes
The logarithmic scale is counterintuitive. Avoid these errors:
- 60 dB + 60 dB = 63 dB (not 120 dB!) — logarithmic addition
- 90 dB - 80 dB ≠ 10 dB difference—subtract values, then antilog
- Doubling distance reduces level by 6 dB (not 50%)
- Halving power = -3 dB (not -50%)
- 3 dB increase = 2× power (barely noticeable), 10 dB = 2× loudness (clearly audible)
Essential Formulas
Core equations for sound level calculations:
- Pressure: dB SPL = 20 × log₁₀(P / 20µPa)
- Intensity: dB IL = 10 × log₁₀(I / 10⁻¹²W/m²)
- Power: dB SWL = 10 × log₁₀(W / 10⁻¹²W)
- Combining equal sources: L_total = L + 10×log₁₀(n), where n = number of sources
- Distance law: L₂ = L₁ - 20×log₁₀(r₂/r₁) for point sources
Adding Sound Levels
You cannot add decibels arithmetically. Use logarithmic addition:
- Two equal sources: L_total = L_single + 3 dB (e.g., 80 dB + 80 dB = 83 dB)
- Ten equal sources: L_total = L_single + 10 dB
- Different levels: Convert to linear, add, convert back (complex)
- Rule of thumb: Adding sources 10+ dB apart barely increases total (<0.5 dB)
- Example: 90 dB machine + 70 dB background = 90.04 dB (barely noticeable)
Sound Level Benchmarks
| Source / Environment | Sound Level | Context / Safety |
|---|---|---|
| Threshold of hearing | 0 dB SPL | Reference point, 20 µPa, anechoic conditions |
| Breathing, rustling leaves | 10 dB | Nearly silent, below ambient outdoor noise |
| Whisper at 1.5m | 20-30 dB | Very quiet, library-quiet environment |
| Quiet office | 40-50 dB | Background HVAC, keyboard typing |
| Normal conversation | 60-65 dB | At 1 meter, comfortable listening |
| Busy restaurant | 70-75 dB | Loud but manageable for hours |
| Vacuum cleaner | 75-80 dB | Annoying, but no immediate risk |
| Heavy traffic, alarm clock | 80-85 dB | 8-hour OSHA limit, long-term risk |
| Lawn mower, blender | 85-90 dB | Hearing protection recommended after 2 hours |
| Subway train, power tools | 90-95 dB | Very loud, max 2 hours without protection |
| Nightclub, MP3 max | 100-110 dB | Damage after 15 minutes, ear fatigue |
| Rock concert, car horn | 110-115 dB | Painful, immediate damage risk |
| Thunderclap, siren nearby | 120 dB | Threshold of pain, ear protection mandatory |
| Jet engine at 30m | 130-140 dB | Permanent damage even brief exposure |
| Gunshot, artillery | 140-165 dB | Eardrum rupture risk, concussive |
Real-World Sound Levels: From Silence to Pain
Understanding sound levels through familiar examples helps calibrate your perception. Note: sustained exposure above 85 dB risks hearing damage.
| dB SPL | Pressure (Pa) | Sound Source / Environment | Effect / Perception / Safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 dB | 20 µPa | Threshold of hearing (1 kHz) | Barely audible in anechoic chamber, below ambient noise outdoors |
| 10 dB | 63 µPa | Normal breathing, rustling leaves | Extremely quiet, near-silence |
| 20 dB | 200 µPa | Whisper at 5 feet, quiet library | Very quiet, peaceful environment |
| 30 dB | 630 µPa | Quiet rural area at night, soft whisper | Quiet, suitable for recording studios |
| 40 dB | 2 mPa | Quiet office, refrigerator hum | Moderate quiet, background noise level |
| 50 dB | 6.3 mPa | Light traffic, normal conversation at distance | Comfortable, easy to concentrate |
| 60 dB | 20 mPa | Normal conversation (3 feet), dishwasher | Normal indoor sound, no hearing risk |
| 70 dB | 63 mPa | Busy restaurant, vacuum cleaner, alarm clock | Loud but comfortable short-term |
| 80 dB | 200 mPa | Heavy traffic, garbage disposal, blender | Loud; hearing risk after 8 hours/day |
| 85 dB | 356 mPa | Noisy factory, food blender, lawn mower | OSHA limit: hearing protection required for 8hr exposure |
| 90 dB | 630 mPa | Subway train, power tools, shouting | Very loud; damage after 2 hours |
| 100 dB | 2 Pa | Nightclub, chainsaw, MP3 player max volume | Extremely loud; damage after 15 minutes |
| 110 dB | 6.3 Pa | Rock concert front row, car horn at 3 feet | Painfully loud; damage after 1 minute |
| 120 dB | 20 Pa | Thunderclap, ambulance siren, vuvuzela | Threshold of pain; immediate damage risk |
| 130 dB | 63 Pa | Jackhammer at 1 meter, military jet takeoff | Ear pain, immediate hearing damage |
| 140 dB | 200 Pa | Gunshot, jet engine at 30m, fireworks | Permanent damage even with brief exposure |
| 150 dB | 630 Pa | Jet engine at 3m, artillery fire | Eardrum rupture possible |
| 194 dB | 101.3 kPa | Theoretical maximum in Earth's atmosphere | Pressure wave = 1 atmosphere; shock wave |
Psychoacoustics: How We Perceive Sound
Sound measurement must account for human perception. Physical intensity doesn't equal perceived loudness. Psychoacoustic units like phon and sone bridge physics and perception, enabling meaningful comparisons across frequencies.
Phon (Loudness Level)
Unit of loudness level referenced to 1 kHz
Phon values follow equal-loudness contours (ISO 226:2003). A sound at N phons has the same perceived loudness as N dB SPL at 1 kHz. At 1 kHz, phon = dB SPL exactly. At other frequencies, they differ dramatically due to ear sensitivity.
- 1 kHz reference: 60 phon = 60 dB SPL at 1 kHz (by definition)
- 100 Hz: 60 phon ≈ 70 dB SPL (+10 dB needed for equal loudness)
- 50 Hz: 60 phon ≈ 80 dB SPL (+20 dB needed—bass sounds quieter)
- 4 kHz: 60 phon ≈ 55 dB SPL (-5 dB—peak ear sensitivity)
- Application: Audio equalization, hearing aid calibration, sound quality assessment
- Limitation: Frequency-dependent; requires pure tones or spectrum analysis
Sone (Perceived Loudness)
Linear unit of subjective loudness
Sones quantify perceived loudness linearly: 2 sones sounds twice as loud as 1 sone. Defined by Stevens' power law, 1 sone = 40 phon. Doubling sones = +10 phon = +10 dB at 1 kHz.
- 1 sone = 40 phon = 40 dB SPL at 1 kHz (definition)
- Doubling: 2 sones = 50 phon, 4 sones = 60 phon, 8 sones = 70 phon
- Stevens' law: Perceived loudness ∝ (intensity)^0.3 for mid-level sounds
- Real-world: Conversation (1 sone), vacuum (4 sones), chainsaw (64 sones)
- Application: Product noise ratings, appliance comparisons, subjective assessment
- Advantage: Intuitive—4 sones literally sounds 4× louder than 1 sone
Practical Applications Across Industries
Audio Engineering & Production
Professional audio uses dB extensively for signal levels, mixing, and mastering:
- 0 dBFS (Full Scale): Maximum digital level before clipping
- Mixing: Target -6 to -3 dBFS peak, -12 to -9 dBFS RMS for headroom
- Mastering: -14 LUFS (loudness units) for streaming, -9 LUFS for radio
- Signal-to-noise ratio: >90 dB for professional equipment, >100 dB for audiophile
- Dynamic range: Classical music 60+ dB, pop music 6-12 dB (loudness war)
- Room acoustics: RT60 reverberation time, -3 dB vs -6 dB roll-off points
Occupational Safety (OSHA/NIOSH)
Workplace noise exposure limits prevent hearing loss:
- OSHA: 85 dB = 8-hour TWA (time-weighted average) action level
- 90 dB: 8 hours max exposure without protection
- 95 dB: 4 hours max, 100 dB: 2 hours, 105 dB: 1 hour (halving rule)
- 115 dB: 15 minutes max without protection
- 140 dB: Immediate danger—hearing protection mandatory
- Dosimetry: Cumulative exposure tracking using noise dosimeters
Environmental & Community Noise
Environmental regulations protect public health and quality of life:
- WHO guidelines: <55 dB daytime, <40 dB nighttime outdoors
- EPA: Ldn (day-night average) <70 dB to prevent hearing loss
- Aircraft: FAA requires noise contours for airports (65 dB DNL limit)
- Construction: Local limits typically 80-90 dB at property line
- Traffic: Highway noise barriers target 10-15 dB reduction
- Measurement: dBA weighting approximates human annoyance response
Room Acoustics & Architecture
Acoustic design requires precise sound level control:
- Speech intelligibility: Target 65-70 dB at listener, <35 dB background
- Concert halls: 80-95 dB peak, 2-2.5s reverberation time
- Recording studios: NC 15-20 (noise criterion curves), <25 dB ambient
- Classrooms: <35 dB background, 15+ dB speech-to-noise ratio
- STC ratings: Sound Transmission Class (wall isolation performance)
- NRC: Noise Reduction Coefficient for absorption materials
Common Conversions and Calculations
Essential formulas for everyday acoustics work:
Quick Reference
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| dB SPL | Pascal | Pa = 20µPa × 10^(dB/20) | 60 dB = 0.02 Pa |
| Pascal | dB SPL | dB = 20 × log₁₀(Pa / 20µPa) | 0.02 Pa = 60 dB |
| dB SPL | W/m² | I = 10⁻¹² × 10^(dB/10) | 60 dB ≈ 10⁻⁶ W/m² |
| Phon | Sone | sone = 2^((phon-40)/10) | 60 phon = 4 sones |
| Sone | Phon | phon = 40 + 10×log₂(sone) | 4 sones = 60 phon |
| Neper | dB | dB = Np × 8.686 | 1 Np = 8.686 dB |
| Bel | dB | dB = B × 10 | 6 B = 60 dB |
Complete Sound Unit Conversion Reference
All sound units with precise conversion formulas. Reference: 20 µPa (threshold of hearing), 10⁻¹² W/m² (reference intensity)
Decibel (dB SPL) Conversions
Base Unit: dB SPL (re 20 µPa)
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| dB SPL | Pascal | Pa = 20×10⁻⁶ × 10^(dB/20) | 60 dB = 0.02 Pa |
| dB SPL | Micropascal | µPa = 20 × 10^(dB/20) | 60 dB = 20,000 µPa |
| dB SPL | W/m² | I = 10⁻¹² × 10^(dB/10) | 60 dB ≈ 10⁻⁶ W/m² |
| Pascal | dB SPL | dB = 20 × log₁₀(Pa / 20µPa) | 0.02 Pa = 60 dB |
| Micropascal | dB SPL | dB = 20 × log₁₀(µPa / 20) | 20,000 µPa = 60 dB |
Sound Pressure Units
Base Unit: Pascal (Pa)
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pascal | Micropascal | µPa = Pa × 1,000,000 | 0.02 Pa = 20,000 µPa |
| Pascal | Bar | bar = Pa / 100,000 | 100,000 Pa = 1 bar |
| Pascal | Atmosphere | atm = Pa / 101,325 | 101,325 Pa = 1 atm |
| Micropascal | Pascal | Pa = µPa / 1,000,000 | 20,000 µPa = 0.02 Pa |
Sound Intensity Conversions
Base Unit: Watt per square meter (W/m²)
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| W/m² | dB IL | dB IL = 10 × log₁₀(I / 10⁻¹²) | 10⁻⁶ W/m² = 60 dB IL |
| W/m² | W/cm² | W/cm² = W/m² / 10,000 | 1 W/m² = 0.0001 W/cm² |
| W/cm² | W/m² | W/m² = W/cm² × 10,000 | 0.0001 W/cm² = 1 W/m² |
Loudness (Psychoacoustic) Conversions
Frequency-dependent perceived loudness scales
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phon | Sone | sone = 2^((phon - 40) / 10) | 60 phon = 4 sones |
| Sone | Phon | phon = 40 + 10 × log₂(sone) | 4 sones = 60 phon |
| Phon | dB SPL @ 1kHz | At 1 kHz: phon = dB SPL | 60 phon = 60 dB SPL @ 1kHz |
| Sone | Description | Doubling sones = 10 phon increase | 8 sones is 2× louder than 4 sones |
Specialized Logarithmic Units
| From | To | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neper | Decibel | dB = Np × 8.686 | 1 Np = 8.686 dB |
| Decibel | Neper | Np = dB / 8.686 | 20 dB = 2.303 Np |
| Bel | Decibel | dB = B × 10 | 6 B = 60 dB |
| Decibel | Bel | B = dB / 10 | 60 dB = 6 B |
Essential Acoustic Relationships
| Calculation | Formula | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SPL from pressure | SPL = 20 × log₁₀(P / P₀) where P₀ = 20 µPa | 2 Pa = 100 dB SPL |
| Intensity from SPL | I = I₀ × 10^(SPL/10) where I₀ = 10⁻¹² W/m² | 80 dB → 10⁻⁴ W/m² |
| Pressure from intensity | P = √(I × ρ × c) where ρc ≈ 400 | 10⁻⁴ W/m² → 0.2 Pa |
| Adding uncorrelated sources | SPL_total = 10 × log₁₀(10^(SPL₁/10) + 10^(SPL₂/10)) | 60 dB + 60 dB = 63 dB |
| Distance doubling | SPL₂ = SPL₁ - 6 dB (point source) | 90 dB @ 1m → 84 dB @ 2m |
Best Practices for Sound Measurement
Accurate Measurement
- Use calibrated Class 1 or Class 2 sound level meters (IEC 61672)
- Calibrate before each session with acoustic calibrator (94 or 114 dB)
- Position microphone away from reflective surfaces (1.2-1.5m height typical)
- Use slow response (1s) for steady sounds, fast (125ms) for fluctuating
- Apply windscreen outdoors (wind noise starts at 12 mph / 5 m/s)
- Record for 15+ minutes to capture temporal variations
Frequency Weighting
- A-weighting (dBA): General purpose, environmental, occupational noise
- C-weighting (dBC): Peak measurements, low-frequency assessment
- Z-weighting (dBZ): Flat response for full-spectrum analysis
- Never convert dBA ↔ dBC—frequency content dependent
- A-weighting approximates 40-phon contour (moderate loudness)
- Use octave-band analysis for detailed frequency information
Professional Reporting
- Always specify: dB SPL, dBA, dBC, dBZ (never just 'dB')
- Report time weighting: Fast, Slow, Impulse
- Include distance, measurement height, and orientation
- Note background noise levels separately
- Report Leq (equivalent continuous level) for varying sounds
- Include measurement uncertainty (±1-2 dB typical)
Hearing Protection
- 85 dB: Consider protection for prolonged exposure (>8 hours)
- 90 dB: Mandatory protection after 8 hours (OSHA)
- 100 dB: Use protection after 2 hours
- 110 dB: Protect after 30 minutes, double protection above 115 dB
- Earplugs: 15-30 dB reduction, earmuffs: 20-35 dB
- Never exceed 140 dB even with protection—physical trauma risk
Fascinating Facts About Sound
Blue Whale Songs
Blue whales produce calls up to 188 dB SPL underwater—the loudest biological sound on Earth. These low-frequency calls (15-20 Hz) can travel hundreds of miles through the ocean, enabling whale communication across vast distances.
Anechoic Chambers
The world's quietest room (Microsoft, Redmond) measures -20.6 dB SPL—quieter than the threshold of hearing. People can hear their own heartbeat, blood circulation, and even stomach gurgling. No one has stayed more than 45 minutes due to disorientation.
Krakatoa Eruption (1883)
The loudest sound in recorded history: 310 dB SPL at source, heard 3,000 miles away. The pressure wave circled Earth 4 times. Sailors 40 miles away suffered ruptured eardrums. Such intensity cannot exist in normal atmosphere—creates shock waves.
Theoretical Limit
194 dB SPL is the theoretical maximum in Earth's atmosphere at sea level—beyond this, you create a shock wave (explosion), not a sound wave. At 194 dB, rarefaction equals vacuum (0 Pa), so sound becomes discontinuous.
Dog Hearing
Dogs hear 67-45,000 Hz (vs humans 20-20,000 Hz) and detect sounds 4× farther away. Their hearing sensitivity peaks around 8 kHz—10 dB more sensitive than humans. This is why dog whistles work: 23-54 kHz, inaudible to humans.
Film Sound Levels
Movie theaters target 85 dB SPL average (Leq) with 105 dB peaks (Dolby spec). This is 20 dB louder than home viewing. Extended low-frequency response: 20 Hz subwoofers enable realistic explosions and impacts—home systems typically cut off at 40-50 Hz.
Complete Units Catalog
డెసిబెల్ స్కేల్స్
| Unit | Symbol | Type | Notes / Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| డెసిబెల్ (సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్ స్థాయి) | dB SPL | డెసిబెల్ స్కేల్స్ | Most commonly used unit |
| డెసిబెల్ | dB | డెసిబెల్ స్కేల్స్ | Most commonly used unit |
సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్
| Unit | Symbol | Type | Notes / Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| పాస్కల్ | Pa | సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్ | Most commonly used unit |
| మైక్రోపాస్కల్ | µPa | సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్ | Most commonly used unit |
| బార్ (సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్) | bar | సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్ | Rarely used for sound; 1 bar = 10⁵ Pa. More common in pressure contexts. |
| వాతావరణం (సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్) | atm | సౌండ్ ప్రెజర్ | Atmospheric pressure unit, rarely used for sound measurement. |
సౌండ్ ఇంటెన్సిటీ
| Unit | Symbol | Type | Notes / Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| వాట్ పర్ చదరపు మీటర్ | W/m² | సౌండ్ ఇంటెన్సిటీ | Most commonly used unit |
| వాట్ పర్ చదరపు సెంటీమీటర్ | W/cm² | సౌండ్ ఇంటెన్సిటీ |
లౌడ్నెస్ స్కేల్స్
| Unit | Symbol | Type | Notes / Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| ఫోన్ (1 kHz వద్ద లౌడ్నెస్ స్థాయి) | phon | లౌడ్నెస్ స్కేల్స్ | Equal-loudness level, referenced to 1 kHz. Frequency-dependent perceived loudness. |
| సోన్ (గ్రహించిన లౌడ్నెస్) | sone | లౌడ్నెస్ స్కేల్స్ | Linear loudness scale where 2 sones = 2× louder. 1 sone = 40 phon. |
ప్రత్యేక యూనిట్లు
| Unit | Symbol | Type | Notes / Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| నేపర్ | Np | ప్రత్యేక యూనిట్లు | Most commonly used unit |
| బెల్ | B | ప్రత్యేక యూనిట్లు |
Frequently Asked Questions
Why can't I convert dBA to dB SPL?
dBA applies frequency-dependent weighting that attenuates low frequencies. A 100 Hz tone at 80 dB SPL measures ~70 dBA (-10 dB weighting), while 1 kHz at 80 dB SPL measures 80 dBA (no weighting). Without knowing the frequency spectrum, conversion is impossible. You'd need FFT analysis and apply the inverse A-weighting curve.
Why is 3 dB considered barely noticeable?
+3 dB = doubling power or intensity, but only 1.4× pressure increase. Human perception follows logarithmic response: 10 dB increase sounds roughly 2× louder. 3 dB is the smallest change most people detect under controlled conditions; in real environments, 5+ dB is needed.
How do I add two sound levels?
You cannot add decibels arithmetically. For equal levels: L_total = L + 3 dB. For different levels: Convert to linear (10^(dB/10)), add, convert back (10×log₁₀). Example: 80 dB + 80 dB = 83 dB (not 160 dB!). Rule of thumb: source 10+ dB quieter contributes <0.5 dB to total.
What's the difference between dB, dBA, and dBC?
dB SPL: Unweighted sound pressure level. dBA: A-weighted (approximates human hearing, attenuates bass). dBC: C-weighted (nearly flat, minimal filtering). Use dBA for general noise, environmental, occupational. Use dBC for peak measurements and low-frequency assessment. They measure the same sound differently—no direct conversion.
Why does halving distance not halve sound level?
Sound follows inverse-square law: doubling distance reduces intensity by ¼ (not ½). In dB: every doubling of distance = -6 dB. Example: 90 dB at 1m becomes 84 dB at 2m, 78 dB at 4m, 72 dB at 8m. This assumes point source in free field—rooms have reflections that complicate this.
Can sound go below 0 dB?
Yes! 0 dB SPL is the reference point (20 µPa), not silence. Negative dB means quieter than reference. Example: -10 dB SPL = 6.3 µPa. Anechoic chambers measure down to -20 dB. However, thermal noise (molecular motion) sets absolute limit around -23 dB at room temperature.
Why do professional sound meters cost $500-5000?
Accuracy and calibration. Class 1 meters meet IEC 61672 (±0.7 dB, 10 Hz-20 kHz). Cheap meters: ±2-5 dB error, poor low/high frequency response, no calibration. Professional use requires traceable calibration, logging, octave analysis, and durability. Legal/OSHA compliance demands certified equipment.
What's the relationship between phon and dB?
At 1 kHz: phon = dB SPL exactly (by definition). At other frequencies: they diverge due to ear sensitivity. Example: 60 phon requires 60 dB at 1 kHz, but 70 dB at 100 Hz (+10 dB) and 55 dB at 4 kHz (-5 dB). Phon accounts for equal-loudness contours, dB does not.
పూర్తి సాధనాల డైరెక్టరీ
UNITS లో అందుబాటులో ఉన్న అన్ని 71 సాధనాలు