Threshold of audibility: Difference between revisions
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">The level above which [[sound]] intensity, at any specified [[frequency]], must rise in order to be detected by the average human ear.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">This threshold value decreases with increasing frequency from a value of about one microwatt m<sup> | <div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">The level above which [[sound]] intensity, at any specified [[frequency]], must rise in order to be detected by the average human ear.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">This threshold value decreases with increasing frequency from a value of about one microwatt m<sup>-2 </sup> at 50 Hz to slightly less than 10<sup>-6</sup> microwatts m<sup>-2</sup> at about 2000 Hz, and then increases with increasing frequency to about 10<sup>4</sup> microwatt m<sup>-2</sup> near 30 000 Hz. As the sound intensity rises above the threshold of audibility at any frequency, continued increase will finally raise the [[intensity]] to a second type of limit, the [[threshold of pain]] (threshold of discomfort, threshold of feeling). This threshold is rather insensitive to frequency, being found at about 10<sup>6</sup> microwatts m<sup>-2</sup> for nearly all frequencies in the audible [[range]]. It represents the limit above which appreciable increase in sound intensity will lead to sensible pain in the average human ear. <br/>''See'' [[decibel]].</div><br/> </div> | ||
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Latest revision as of 15:19, 20 February 2012
threshold of audibility
The level above which sound intensity, at any specified frequency, must rise in order to be detected by the average human ear.
This threshold value decreases with increasing frequency from a value of about one microwatt m-2 at 50 Hz to slightly less than 10-6 microwatts m-2 at about 2000 Hz, and then increases with increasing frequency to about 104 microwatt m-2 near 30 000 Hz. As the sound intensity rises above the threshold of audibility at any frequency, continued increase will finally raise the intensity to a second type of limit, the threshold of pain (threshold of discomfort, threshold of feeling). This threshold is rather insensitive to frequency, being found at about 106 microwatts m-2 for nearly all frequencies in the audible range. It represents the limit above which appreciable increase in sound intensity will lead to sensible pain in the average human ear.
See decibel.
See decibel.