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  2. Parabolic microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_microphone

    Parabolic microphone used at an American college football game. A parabolic microphone is a microphone that uses a parabolic reflector to collect and focus sound waves onto a transducer, in much the same way that a parabolic antenna (e.g. satellite dish) does with radio waves. Though they lack high fidelity, parabolic microphones have great ...

  3. Acoustic mirror - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_mirror

    The pipe which held the "collector head" (microphone) can be seen in front of the structure. An acoustic mirror is a passive device used to reflect and focus (concentrate) sound waves . Parabolic acoustic mirrors are widely used in parabolic microphones to pick up sound from great distances, employed in surveillance and reporting of outdoor ...

  4. Echo chamber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echo_chamber

    One or more microphones are placed along the length of the room, and these pick up both the sound from the speaker and its reflections off the walls of the chamber. The farther away from the loudspeaker, the more echo and reverberation the microphone(s) picks up, and the louder the reverberation becomes in relation to the source.

  5. Dereverberation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dereverberation

    Dereverberation of audio (speech or music) is a corresponding function to blind deconvolution of images, although the techniques used are usually very different. Reverberation itself is caused by sound reflections in a room (or other enclosed space) and is quantified by the room reverberation time and the direct-to-reverberant ratio. The effect ...

  6. Microphone practice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphone_practice

    Instrumental use of microphones has been developed by many experimental composers, musicians and sound artists. They use microphones in unconventional ways, for example by preparing them with objects, moving them around or using contact microphones to colour the sound and be able to amplify otherwise very silent sounds.

  7. Free field (acoustics) - Wikipedia

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

    The lack of reflections in a free field means that any sound in the field is entirely determined by a listener or microphone because it is received through the direct sound of the sound source. This makes the open field a direct sound field. [3] In a free field, sound is attenuated with increased distance according to the inverse-square law. [1]

  8. Microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphone

    The carbon button microphone (or sometimes just a button microphone), uses a capsule or button containing carbon granules pressed between two metal plates like the Berliner and Edison microphones. A voltage is applied across the metal plates, causing a small current to flow through the carbon.

  9. Boundary microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boundary_microphone

    The predecessor of the directional boundary microphone was a directional microphone placed in an Electrovoice Mic Mouse, a foam block that suspended a conventional microphone horizontally just above a surface. Because conventional microphone diaphragms are relatively large (> 1 cm diameter), phase interference from surface sound reflections ...

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