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  2. Acoustic quieting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_quieting

    A sound proof room, showing acoustic damping tiles used for noise absorption and soundproofing. Noise absorption: In architectural acoustics, unwanted sounds can be absorbed rather than reflected inside the room of an observer. This is useful for noises with no point source and when a listener needs to hear sounds only from a point source and ...

  3. Anechoic tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anechoic_tile

    Anechoic tiles are rubber or synthetic polymer tiles containing thousands of tiny voids, applied to the outer hulls of military ships and submarines, as well as anechoic chambers. Their function is twofold: To absorb the sound waves of active sonar, reducing and distorting the return signal, thereby reducing its effective range.

  4. Absorption (acoustics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_(acoustics)

    Acoustic tile (ceiling) .80 .90 .90 .95 .90 Brick .03 .03 .03 .04 .05 ... floors and ceilings, and if they are to be effective at low frequencies, these must be ...

  5. Soundproofing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundproofing

    Absorption in this sense refers to reducing a resonating frequency in a cavity by installing insulation between walls, ceilings or floors. Acoustic panels can play a role in treatment reducing reflections that make the overall sound in the source room louder, after walls, ceilings, and floors have been soundproofed.

  6. Noise control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_control

    Sound treatment panels contrast with red curtains in a church meeting hall Soundproof doors in a broadcast center Acoustic ceiling tiles. Architectural acoustics noise control practices include interior sound reverberation reduction, inter-room noise transfer mitigation, and exterior building skin augmentation.

  7. Architectural acoustics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architectural_acoustics

    The typical sound paths are ceilings, room partitions, acoustic ceiling panels (such as wood dropped ceiling panels), doors, windows, flanking, ducting and other penetrations. Technical solutions depend on the source of the noise and the path of acoustic transmission , for example noise by steps or noise by (air, water) flow vibrations.

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