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  2. Room modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_modes

    Room modes are the collection of resonances that exist in a room when the room is excited by an acoustic source such as a loudspeaker. Most rooms have their fundamental resonances in the 20 Hz to 200 Hz region, each frequency being related to one or more of the room's dimensions or a divisor thereof. These resonances affect the low-frequency ...

  3. Absorption (acoustics) - Wikipedia

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

    The energy transformed into heat is said to have been 'lost'. [1] When sound from a loudspeaker collides with the walls of a room, part of the sound's energy is reflected back into the room, part is transmitted through the walls, and part is absorbed into the walls. Just as the acoustic energy was transmitted through the air as pressure ...

  4. Room acoustics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_acoustics

    To get the desired RT60, several acoustics materials can be used as described in several books. [12] [13] A valuable simplification of the task was proposed by Oscar Bonello in 1979. [14] It consists of using standard acoustic panels of 1 m 2 hung from the walls of the room (only if the

  5. Sound power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_power

    Sound power or acoustic power is the rate at which sound energy is emitted, reflected, transmitted or received, per unit time. [1] It is defined [2] as "through a surface, the product of the sound pressure, and the component of the particle velocity, at a point on the surface in the direction normal to the surface, integrated over that surface."

  6. Bass trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_trap

    A typical bass trap. Bass traps are acoustic energy absorbers which are designed to damp low-frequency sound energy with the goal of attaining a flatter low-frequency (LF) room response by reducing LF resonances in rooms.

  7. Sabin (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabin_(unit)

    In acoustics, the sabin (or more precisely the square foot sabin) is a unit of sound absorption, used for expressing the total effective absorption for the interior of a room. Sound absorption can be expressed in terms of the percentage of energy absorbed compared with the percentage reflected .

  8. Diffusion (acoustics) - Wikipedia

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

    Diffusion, in architectural acoustics, is the spreading of sound energy evenly in a given environment. A perfectly diffusive sound space is one in which the reverberation time is the same at any listening position. Most interior spaces are non-diffusive; the reverberation time is considerably different around the room.

  9. Sound intensity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_intensity

    Sound intensity, also known as acoustic intensity, is defined as the power carried by sound waves per unit area in a direction perpendicular to that area, also called the sound power density and the sound energy flux density. [2] The SI unit of intensity, which includes sound intensity, is the watt per square meter (W/m 2).