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#1
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Here's the results of some speaker measurements that I made tonight, based
on passing 50 Hz & 4 KHz mixed 1:1 at about 1.2 volts rms, through a Peerless 6.5 inch woofer with about 6 mm Xmax (relatively large for a woofer its size). The speaker is mounted in a roughly 0.4 cubic foot box with no vent. The power amp is a QSC USA 850. This is not very loud. The mic is an ECM8000 that is a few inches from the woofer cone. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ The first graph shows the broadband response. The large spikes at 50 Hz and 4 KHz are clearly visible. The second and third harmonics of the 50 Hz tone are about 30 dB down. The spike for the 4 KHz tone is about 5 dB higher than the spike for 50 Hz because the woofer is simply that much more efficient at 4 KHz. The second graph is taken from the same test, with the frequency scale enlarged to show about 400 Hz on either side of 4 KHz. The first pair of large spikes are about 50 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, the second are about 100 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, and so on. The distortion products are probably a mixture of AM and FM distortion, with FM predominating, as the test is contrived to focus on FM. While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? |
#2
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Many thanks, Arny. Experimentalist that you are, I had a feeling you were off doing that. :-) My question is, wouldn't the kind of distortion claimed as "Doppler" distortion, which is claimed to be FM, have a continuous harmonic structure around that 4k peak rather than the discrete one you are seeing? Is there any way you can think of to exactly simulate an FM modulation of 50 Hz on top of 4 kHz to compare? Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#3
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
Arny Krueger wrote: While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Many thanks, Arny. Experimentalist that you are, I had a feeling you were off doing that. :-) My question is, wouldn't the kind of distortion claimed as "Doppler" distortion, which is claimed to be FM, have a continuous harmonic structure around that 4k peak rather than the discrete one you are seeing? No, because the modulating frequency is a pure tone/ Is there any way you can think of to exactly simulate an FM modulation of 50 Hz on top of 4 kHz to compare? Sure 2 independent ways. First generate a FM-modulated tone in Audition 1.x /CE.2.x These parameters will get you close: Base frequency: 4000 Hz Modulate by 1 Hz Modulation frequency 50 Hz dB volume -15 dB FFT analysis with 65536 points, Blackman-Harris windowing Then, to zoom in on the frequency range around 4 KHz with enough resolution, right click and drag around 4 KHz on the frequency scale. The web page at http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ has been updated to include the results of this simulation, and the one below: You can also run the FM modulation model at http://contact.tm.agilent.com/Agilen...eFM_popup.html with the following parameters: Wc = 5.0 Wm = 0.5 m= 1.02 |
#4
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"Arny Krueger" writes:
"Bob Cain" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Many thanks, Arny. Experimentalist that you are, I had a feeling you were off doing that. :-) My question is, wouldn't the kind of distortion claimed as "Doppler" distortion, which is claimed to be FM, have a continuous harmonic structure around that 4k peak rather than the discrete one you are seeing? No, because the modulating frequency is a pure tone/ That's right. Specifically, you will have sidebands at integer multiples of the modulating frequency, thus the spectrum will be discrete. The magnitude of the nth sideband is given by a Bessel function of the first kind, J_n(B), where B is the amplitude of the modulating signal. [From Mischa Schwartz's "Information, Transmission, Modulation, and Noise," 4th ed.] -- Randy Yates Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Research Triangle Park, NC, USA , 919-472-1124 |
#5
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![]() Would you technical guys agree that the two tone interaction we are hypothesizing can be approximated to low order by: l*sin((wh+wld*sin(wl*t))*t) + h*sin((wl+whd*sin(wh*t))*t) with h and l related to the amplitudes of the HF and LF components respectively, wh the frequency of the HF tone, wl the frequency of the LF tone and wld and whd a measure of the "depth" in Hz of the cross modulations that are related to the relative strength of the two tones? If so, I'd appreciate input on what might be a reasonable set of parameters. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#6
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Bob Cain writes:
Would you technical guys agree that the two tone interaction we are hypothesizing can be approximated to low order by: l*sin((wh+wld*sin(wl*t))*t) + h*sin((wl+whd*sin(wh*t))*t) with h and l related to the amplitudes of the HF and LF components respectively, wh the frequency of the HF tone, wl the frequency of the LF tone and wld and whd a measure of the "depth" in Hz wld and whd would be depths in radians. -- % Randy Yates % "I met someone who looks alot like you, %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % she does the things you do, %%% 919-577-9882 % but she is an IBM." %%%% % 'Yours Truly, 2095', *Time*, ELO http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#7
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... These parameters will get you close: Base frequency: 4000 Hz Modulate by 1 Hz Modulation frequency 50 Hz dB volume -15 dB FFT analysis with 65536 points, Blackman-Harris windowing You know, I don't really mind you using my original work, but you could have at least asked first. My band used to open with the above tone. The college kids loved it. |
#8
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"Jim Carr" wrote in message
news:FnOQc.3226$yh.1571@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... These parameters will get you close: Base frequency: 4000 Hz Modulate by 1 Hz Modulation frequency 50 Hz dB volume -15 dB FFT analysis with 65536 points, Blackman-Harris windowing You know, I don't really mind you using my original work, but you could have at least asked first. My band used to open with the above tone. The college kids loved it. LOL! |
#9
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In alt.music.home-studio and rec.audio.tech, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "Jim Carr" wrote in message news:FnOQc.3226$yh.1571@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... These parameters will get you close: Base frequency: 4000 Hz Modulate by 1 Hz Modulation frequency 50 Hz dB volume -15 dB FFT analysis with 65536 points, Blackman-Harris windowing You know, I don't really mind you using my original work, but you could have at least asked first. My band used to open with the above tone. The college kids loved it. LOL! Don't worry, Arny, it's not original to him (unless he did it before the very early '60's), the Beatles did it first in the opening seconds of "I Feel Fine." Furthermore, effects like this are more like a "riff" or "lick" than a melody, and can't be covered under copyright. ----- http://mindspring.com/~benbradley |
#10
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On Thu, 5 Aug 2004 22:19:23 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: Here's the results of some speaker measurements that I made tonight, based on passing 50 Hz & 4 KHz mixed 1:1 at about 1.2 volts rms, through a Peerless 6.5 inch woofer with about 6 mm Xmax (relatively large for a woofer its size). The speaker is mounted in a roughly 0.4 cubic foot box with no vent. The power amp is a QSC USA 850. This is not very loud. The mic is an ECM8000 that is a few inches from the woofer cone. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ The first graph shows the broadband response. The large spikes at 50 Hz and 4 KHz are clearly visible. The second and third harmonics of the 50 Hz tone are about 30 dB down. The spike for the 4 KHz tone is about 5 dB higher than the spike for 50 Hz because the woofer is simply that much more efficient at 4 KHz. The second graph is taken from the same test, with the frequency scale enlarged to show about 400 Hz on either side of 4 KHz. The first pair of large spikes are about 50 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, the second are about 100 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, and so on. The distortion products are probably a mixture of AM and FM distortion, with FM predominating, as the test is contrived to focus on FM. While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Well, speakers generally are nonlinear, so what you are seeing here is intermod. Doppler distortion in speakers is supposedly a "built-in" effect - nothing to do with non-liearity - that is caused by the same cone reproducing two frequencies simultaneously. The argument goes that if a speaker is reproducing a 1kHz tone, but is simultaneously moving back and forth at 50Hz, the 1kHz tone must be modulated by the Doppler effect. Of course, if you do the maths of superposition, this doesn't happen - the tones coexist perfectly without any doppler. So this is simple, stright-forward intermodulation between the two tones. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#11
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"Don Pearce" wrote in message
Well, speakers generally are nonlinear, so what you are seeing here is intermod. Really? Doppler distortion in speakers is supposedly a "built-in" effect - nothing to do with non-linearity - that is caused by the same cone reproducing two frequencies simultaneously. Agreed. The argument goes that if a speaker is reproducing a 1kHz tone, but is simultaneously moving back and forth at 50Hz, the 1kHz tone must be modulated by the Doppler effect. Of course, if you do the maths of superposition, this doesn't happen - the tones coexist perfectly without any doppler. Tell that to the AES! ;-) So this is simple, straight-forward intermodulation between the two tones. Two reasons I think this really is predominantly FM: (1) The sideband structure looks a lot more like FM than AM, per the simulations I added to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . (2) I redid the experiment using high frequency tones at 1 KHz and 4 KHz. All other things being equal, AM is frequency-independent. FM is frequency-dependent. Since the stimulus for the IM is the 50 Hz tone, the stimulus for 50 Hz sidebands for both the 1 KHz tone and the 4 KHz tone is the same. I did a simulation in Audition of pure FM, and the sidebands on the 1 KHz tone were about 12 dB lower than the ones on the 4 KHz tone, which exactly follows this theory. However, speakers don't have just one kind of distortion. I have added the results of triple tone test results to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . Comparing the amplitudes of the first two sidebands around 1 KHz and 4 KHz, I find that there is an approximate difference of 6 dB. The sidebands around the 4 KHz average about 6 dB higher than those around the 1 KHz tone. If this was pure FM distortion, I would expect a 12 dB difference. I conclude that there is a mixture of AM and FM. |
#12
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On Fri, 6 Aug 2004 07:30:49 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message Well, speakers generally are nonlinear, so what you are seeing here is intermod. Really? Doppler distortion in speakers is supposedly a "built-in" effect - nothing to do with non-linearity - that is caused by the same cone reproducing two frequencies simultaneously. Agreed. The argument goes that if a speaker is reproducing a 1kHz tone, but is simultaneously moving back and forth at 50Hz, the 1kHz tone must be modulated by the Doppler effect. Of course, if you do the maths of superposition, this doesn't happen - the tones coexist perfectly without any doppler. Tell that to the AES! ;-) A great deal of BS has emanated from that organ! So this is simple, straight-forward intermodulation between the two tones. Two reasons I think this really is predominantly FM: (1) The sideband structure looks a lot more like FM than AM, per the simulations I added to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . (2) I redid the experiment using high frequency tones at 1 KHz and 4 KHz. All other things being equal, AM is frequency-independent. FM is frequency-dependent. Since the stimulus for the IM is the 50 Hz tone, the stimulus for 50 Hz sidebands for both the 1 KHz tone and the 4 KHz tone is the same. I did a simulation in Audition of pure FM, and the sidebands on the 1 KHz tone were about 12 dB lower than the ones on the 4 KHz tone, which exactly follows this theory. However, speakers don't have just one kind of distortion. I have added the results of triple tone test results to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . Comparing the amplitudes of the first two sidebands around 1 KHz and 4 KHz, I find that there is an approximate difference of 6 dB. The sidebands around the 4 KHz average about 6 dB higher than those around the 1 KHz tone. If this was pure FM distortion, I would expect a 12 dB difference. I conclude that there is a mixture of AM and FM. The only way to verify this is to look at the phase as well as the amplitude of the sidebands. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#13
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"Don Pearce" wrote in message
On Fri, 6 Aug 2004 07:30:49 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message Well, speakers generally are nonlinear, so what you are seeing here is intermod. Really? Doppler distortion in speakers is supposedly a "built-in" effect - nothing to do with non-linearity - that is caused by the same cone reproducing two frequencies simultaneously. Agreed. The argument goes that if a speaker is reproducing a 1kHz tone, but is simultaneously moving back and forth at 50Hz, the 1kHz tone must be modulated by the Doppler effect. Of course, if you do the maths of superposition, this doesn't happen - the tones coexist perfectly without any doppler. Tell that to the AES! ;-) A great deal of BS has emanated from that organ! So this is simple, straight-forward intermodulation between the two tones. Two reasons I think this really is predominantly FM: (1) The sideband structure looks a lot more like FM than AM, per the simulations I added to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . (2) I redid the experiment using high frequency tones at 1 KHz and 4 KHz. All other things being equal, AM is frequency-independent. FM is frequency-dependent. Since the stimulus for the IM is the 50 Hz tone, the stimulus for 50 Hz sidebands for both the 1 KHz tone and the 4 KHz tone is the same. I did a simulation in Audition of pure FM, and the sidebands on the 1 KHz tone were about 12 dB lower than the ones on the 4 KHz tone, which exactly follows this theory. However, speakers don't have just one kind of distortion. I have added the results of triple tone test results to http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ . Comparing the amplitudes of the first two sidebands around 1 KHz and 4 KHz, I find that there is an approximate difference of 6 dB. The sidebands around the 4 KHz average about 6 dB higher than those around the 1 KHz tone. If this was pure FM distortion, I would expect a 12 dB difference. I conclude that there is a mixture of AM and FM. The only way to verify this is to look at the phase as well as the amplitude of the sidebands. That's one way, but it's a very hard row for me to hoe. So, you decline to believe that the relative amplitudes of the sidebands are different and relevant, as the frequency has increased? |
#14
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
The only way to verify this is to look at the phase as well as the amplitude of the sidebands. That's one way, but it's a very hard row for me to hoe. So, you decline to believe that the relative amplitudes of the sidebands are different and relevant, as the frequency has increased? BTW, I added some simulations of the triple tone test, showing the differing results for AM and FM distortion. The simulations have a darker blue-green border around them, while the lab measurements have a lighter blue border. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ Between the differences in the sideband structure and the amplitudes of the first two sidebands, it seems like this triple-tone test might have some general application. I'm thinking about jitter testing... |
#15
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On Fri, 6 Aug 2004 07:47:24 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: The only way to verify this is to look at the phase as well as the amplitude of the sidebands. That's one way, but it's a very hard row for me to hoe. So, you decline to believe that the relative amplitudes of the sidebands are different and relevant, as the frequency has increased? No, not at all. But I am not convinced that with the complex interactions of a speaker you can reach your conclusion as simply as you have. Non-linearities of various orders can cause a multiplication function which results in phase modulation. But to put this down to Doppler effect is a leap too far for me. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#16
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
Correction: Comparing the amplitudes of the first two sidebands around 1 KHz and 4 KHz, I find that there is an approximate difference of 2 dB in levels relative to the carriers. The sidebands around the 4 KHz average about 2 dB higher than those around the 1 KHz tone. If this was pure FM distortion, I would expect a 12 dB difference. I conclude that there is a mixture of AM and FM, predominantly AM. |
#17
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On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 06:49:53 +0100, Don Pearce
wrote: On Thu, 5 Aug 2004 22:19:23 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Here's the results of some speaker measurements that I made tonight, based on passing 50 Hz & 4 KHz mixed 1:1 at about 1.2 volts rms, through a Peerless 6.5 inch woofer with about 6 mm Xmax (relatively large for a woofer its size). The speaker is mounted in a roughly 0.4 cubic foot box with no vent. The power amp is a QSC USA 850. This is not very loud. The mic is an ECM8000 that is a few inches from the woofer cone. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ The first graph shows the broadband response. The large spikes at 50 Hz and 4 KHz are clearly visible. The second and third harmonics of the 50 Hz tone are about 30 dB down. The spike for the 4 KHz tone is about 5 dB higher than the spike for 50 Hz because the woofer is simply that much more efficient at 4 KHz. The second graph is taken from the same test, with the frequency scale enlarged to show about 400 Hz on either side of 4 KHz. The first pair of large spikes are about 50 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, the second are about 100 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, and so on. The distortion products are probably a mixture of AM and FM distortion, with FM predominating, as the test is contrived to focus on FM. While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Well, speakers generally are nonlinear, so what you are seeing here is intermod. Doppler distortion in speakers is supposedly a "built-in" effect - nothing to do with non-liearity - that is caused by the same cone reproducing two frequencies simultaneously. The argument goes that if a speaker is reproducing a 1kHz tone, but is simultaneously moving back and forth at 50Hz, the 1kHz tone must be modulated by the Doppler effect. Of course, if you do the maths of superposition, this doesn't happen - the tones coexist perfectly without any doppler. I don't think anyone intended that "superposition" be used willie-nilly. How about an explanation of why a moving "tweeter" does not produce doppler. So this is simple, stright-forward intermodulation between the two tones. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#18
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On Thu, 5 Aug 2004 22:19:23 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: Here's the results of some speaker measurements that I made tonight, based on passing 50 Hz & 4 KHz mixed 1:1 at about 1.2 volts rms, through a Peerless 6.5 inch woofer with about 6 mm Xmax (relatively large for a woofer its size). The speaker is mounted in a roughly 0.4 cubic foot box with no vent. The power amp is a QSC USA 850. This is not very loud. The mic is an ECM8000 that is a few inches from the woofer cone. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ The first graph shows the broadband response. The large spikes at 50 Hz and 4 KHz are clearly visible. The second and third harmonics of the 50 Hz tone are about 30 dB down. The spike for the 4 KHz tone is about 5 dB higher than the spike for 50 Hz because the woofer is simply that much more efficient at 4 KHz. The second graph is taken from the same test, with the frequency scale enlarged to show about 400 Hz on either side of 4 KHz. The first pair of large spikes are about 50 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, the second are about 100 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, and so on. The distortion products are probably a mixture of AM and FM distortion, with FM predominating, as the test is contrived to focus on FM. While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Knowing that the amplitude of the sidebands should be proportional (or at least some type of direct relation) to the amplitude of the 50 Hz signal. lower it by 10 or 20dB, and let's see how the sidebands drop, hoping they don't fall into the noise. Regardless, you already have me convinced you're measuring doppler distortion. ----- http://mindspring.com/~benbradley |
#19
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"Ben Bradley" wrote in message
Knowing that the amplitude of the sidebands should be proportional (or at least some type of direct relation) to the amplitude of the 50 Hz signal. lower it by 10 or 20dB, and let's see how the sidebands drop, hoping they don't fall into the noise. OK, the data from 10 dB lower input is the second set of triple-tone experimental data (light yellow background) at http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ Regardless, you already have me convinced you're measuring Doppler distortion. Well, a mixture. I'm convinced that AM distortion usually dominates, but that Doppler is also always there, if its large enough to find. |
#20
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: Well, a mixture. I'm convinced that AM distortion usually dominates, but that Doppler is also always there, if its large enough to find. Arny, are you aware of any mathematical model of the typical loudspeaker non-linearity? Just the transducer part, not Doppler. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#21
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
Arny Krueger wrote: Well, a mixture. I'm convinced that AM distortion usually dominates, but that Doppler is also always there, if its large enough to find. Arny, are you aware of any mathematical model of the typical loudspeaker non-linearity? Just the transducer part, not Doppler. http://www.gedlee.com/Audio_trans.htm |
#22
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: Arny, are you aware of any mathematical model of the typical loudspeaker non-linearity? Just the transducer part, not Doppler. http://www.gedlee.com/Audio_trans.htm Thanks, Arny. Looks like a pretty comprehensive book but outside my immediate means. I did note that in the chapter on distortion there was nothing in the contents that indicated a treatment of Doppler. If you have it, is that true? Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#23
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: Here's the results of some speaker measurements that I made tonight, based on passing 50 Hz & 4 KHz mixed 1:1 at about 1.2 volts rms, through a Peerless 6.5 inch woofer with about 6 mm Xmax (relatively large for a woofer its size). The speaker is mounted in a roughly 0.4 cubic foot box with no vent. The power amp is a QSC USA 850. This is not very loud. The mic is an ECM8000 that is a few inches from the woofer cone. http://www.pcavtech.com/techtalk/doppler/ The first graph shows the broadband response. The large spikes at 50 Hz and 4 KHz are clearly visible. The second and third harmonics of the 50 Hz tone are about 30 dB down. The spike for the 4 KHz tone is about 5 dB higher than the spike for 50 Hz because the woofer is simply that much more efficient at 4 KHz. The second graph is taken from the same test, with the frequency scale enlarged to show about 400 Hz on either side of 4 KHz. The first pair of large spikes are about 50 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, the second are about 100 Hz on either side of 4 KHz, and so on. The distortion products are probably a mixture of AM and FM distortion, with FM predominating, as the test is contrived to focus on FM. While I've got this set up, any other data that anyone would find interesting? Paul Klipsch used to do a doppler distortion comparison between some arbitrary 12" direct radiator and one of his big horns. Even when the difference in amplitudes was 10dB (the K-Horn being louder), the difference in sideband amplitude was significant (the horn being a much lower percentage). He was careful to keep the higher tone low enough in frequency so that both tones were emitted by the woofer. There was an obvious audible difference between the two, with the direct radiator sounding "rougher", even when 10dB lower in amplitude. As I remember, he wanted to find some way to determine the relative AM to FM contributions, but couldn't figure out how to do it with the technology of the times (late '60s to early '70's, AFAIR). I think he published at least one paper on it. Isaac |
#24
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"Isaac Wingfield" wrote in message
Paul Klipsch used to do a doppler distortion comparison between some arbitrary 12" direct radiator and one of his big horns. Modulation Distortion in Loudspeakers Author(s): Klipsch, Paul W. Publication: Preprint 562; Convention 34; April 1968 Abstract: When comparing 2 loudspeakers, one with direct radiator bass system and the other with horn loaded bass, a subjective judgment was that the one with the horn loaded bass is ·cleaner.· Both speakers were by the same manufacturer. Various tests were applied and by process of elimination it appears the difference in listening quality is due to frequency modulation distortion. Beers and Belar analyzed this form of distortion in 1943, but since that time the effect has been almost ignored. Now, with amplifiers and source material reaching new lows in distortion, differences between good loudspeakers begin to appear significant. The mathematical analysis has been reviewed, and measurements have been made using a spectrum analyzer. These have been correlated with listening tests by preparing tapes of oscillator tones and music with and without a low frequency source to produce frequency modulation distortion. The spectrum analyses corroborate the mathematical analysis and the listening tests offer a subjective evaluation. The conclusion is that frequency modulation in loudspeakers accounts in large measure for the masking of ·inner voices.· As Beers and Belar put it, ·The sound is just not clean.· Reduction of diaphragm excursions at lower frequencies reduces FM distortion. Horn loading, properly applied, offers the greatest reduction, while simultaneously improving bass power output capability. Tentatively it is wondered if FM distortion in loudspeakers may be the last frontier in loudspeaker improvement. Even when the difference in amplitudes was 10dB (the K-Horn being louder), the difference in sideband amplitude was significant (the horn being a much lower percentage). He was careful to keep the higher tone low enough in frequency so that both tones were emitted by the woofer. As things evolve, this makes it harder to prove that the modulation distortion at hand is FM, mot AM There was an obvious audible difference between the two, with the direct radiator sounding "rougher", even when 10dB lower in amplitude. Direct radiator drivers have improved considerably since then. For example, the spec Xmax was introduced some decades later. As I remember, he wanted to find some way to determine the relative AM to FM contributions, but couldn't figure out how to do it with the technology of the times (late '60s to early '70's, AFAIR). The paper I cited was published in 1968. Ironically, the FFT-based measurement technology we enjoy today was just becoming well-known at that time. I think that the triple tone test and modern spectrum analyzer technology provides valuable insights into this area. I think that I've established that when there are two upper-frequency probe tones, FM distortion will produce sidebands with a higher amplitude with the highest frequency tone, all other things being equal. This finding can be, and probably should be applied to investigations relating to both Doppler distortion and jitter. |
#25
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: As things evolve, this makes it harder to prove that the modulation distortion at hand is FM, mot AM Right. The horn loaded system has a smaller excursion so that AM would be reduced to a similar, and perhaps greater degree. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#26
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Bob Cain writes:
Right. The horn loaded system has a smaller excursion so that AM would be reduced to a similar, and perhaps greater degree. Agreed - the Klipschorn will perform better either way. --A Klipschorn pair owner -- % Randy Yates % "Remember the good old 1980's, when %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % things were so uncomplicated?" %%% 919-577-9882 % 'Ticket To The Moon' %%%% % *Time*, Electric Light Orchestra http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#27
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On Sat, 7 Aug 2004 07:02:36 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: .....stuff deleted........ I think that the triple tone test and modern spectrum analyzer technology provides valuable insights into this area. I think that I've established that when there are two upper-frequency probe tones, FM distortion will produce sidebands with a higher amplitude with the highest frequency tone, all other things being equal. This finding can be, and probably should be applied to investigations relating to both Doppler distortion and jitter. To get an idea of the magnitude of any Doppler (FM) artifacts, you need to know the cone velocity. It is my understanding, that in the area where a speaker has a flat response, the velocities are fairly consistent as frequency changes. So within this area, you should be able to analyze and predict the Doppler effects. I don't have much data that represents typical cone velocities at different power levels (or SPL level, at say, 1 meter). From some of the data shown on the Linkwitz site, he has a woofer with about 1.5 Meters/sec at 86db @1meter (that's reasonably loud). Does anyone have typical data for other loudspeakers, especially at higher frequencies (tweeters, midrange)? Using 1.5 M/s peak cone velocity, the speed of sound is about 340 M/sec, that should vary all the frequencies whose velocities were supposed to be something else. Usually for the purpose of analysis, we assume that all the other ones are pretty small. Anyhow, with those numbers, you get about 0.44% change in frequency, higher or lower depending which way the cone is moving. If the signal causing the 1.5 meter/sec was 50 Hz , and you had another signal of 4 KHz, then your 4khz note appears to be changing from 4khz to 4017 khz, then back then to a low of 3983 khz, 50 times a second. In the frequency domain (your ears, spectrum analyzer) things get weird. The result frequencies (there are more than what you put in) depend on the ratio of the change in frequency divided by the modulating frequency - this is the modulation index - M. The total energy is unchanged, so that the addition of extra stuff comes at the expense the main peak (unlike IM distortion, where the modulating frequency has to add energy). If the modulation index is less than 0.3, then there are 2 extra frequencies (distortion), each one has an amplitude of 1/2 times M (modulation index), or the total grunge is M . For low values of M, you get 2 extra freq., the sum and difference (just like IM distortion, but out of phase with each other, and may sound QUITE different) . At higher M the calculation is very complex, you can have almost all distortion with almost no fundamental. Using the above numbers, change in frequency is about 17 Hz, modulation freq. is 50 Hz, so M=0.34 , or about 17% for each extra frequency. These will be at 4050 and 3950. This is NOT IM distortion. The thing to note is that theamount of distortion changes with modulating frequency! At 10Hz modulating freq,. M is about 1.7 - that will mess up the waveform badly. The worst case is when the frequencies are very different. With high values of M, the note spreads out in frequency - instead of a fundamental and two satellite tones, there is an almost contiuous block of frequencies. With a 5 or 10 Hz modulation, instead of 4 KHz and 2 extra peaks, you get an almost continuous band of frequencies around 4 KHz. The sound? High M values are VERY noticeable, usually a warbling sound, or noticeable extra frequencies. As M decreases to about 0.3, the original pure tone sounds indistinct in pitch, or you might just notice extra "stuff", and as M decreases to less than 0.1, it's very hard to tell (for me). These were done at 4 KHz, with varying amplitudes and frequency of the modulation frequency. This was not a really good listening test, the real Golden Ears might be better at finding the threshold. I used 2 signal generators, one modulating the others frequency. I used a spectrum analyzer to determine M, and adjusted the signal generators to vary M as I listened to the "tones". My good signal generators are at work, so if you're interested, I can compare IM and FM (Doppler) distortion with the same frequencies. I'm sure Arny has the equipment more readily available - and may even have ..wav files for your listening pleasure, so you can hear for yourself what the effects are. What would be really nice, is to frequency shift a chunk of music with different delta-freq, and different modulation frequencies, i.e., varying M with different conditions. Multi-tone and real music should the preferred way to check this out. The cure? Keep wide ranges of frequencies OUT of a loudspeaker, i.e., use 2 or 3 way systems. Because the modulation index (M) is calculated with the modulating frequency as DENOMINATOR, avoiding low modulating frequencies reduces the distortion. That bears out in my listening tests. As the modulating frequency increases, the less noticeable things are. A 3 way system can have a 10 to 1 range of frequencies for each driver, compared to almost a 1000 to 1 range for a singe wide range speaker. That will make a big difference when you calculate M, the modulation index. -Paul .................................................. ............. Paul Guy Somewhere in the Nova Scotia fog |
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"Paul Guy" wrote in message
On Sat, 7 Aug 2004 07:02:36 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: ....stuff deleted........ I think that the triple tone test and modern spectrum analyzer technology provides valuable insights into this area. I think that I've established that when there are two upper-frequency probe tones, FM distortion will produce sidebands with a higher amplitude with the highest frequency tone, all other things being equal. This finding can be, and probably should be applied to investigations relating to both Doppler distortion and jitter. To get an idea of the magnitude of any Doppler (FM) artifacts, you need to know the cone velocity. It is my understanding, that in the area where a speaker has a flat response, the velocities are fairly consistent as frequency changes. So within this area, you should be able to analyze and predict the Doppler effects. I don't have much data that represents typical cone velocities at different power levels (or SPL level, at say, 1 meter). From some of the data shown on the Linkwitz site, he has a woofer with about 1.5 Meters/sec at 86db @1meter (that's reasonably loud). Does anyone have typical data for other loudspeakers, especially at higher frequencies (tweeters, midrange)? If you can't see the motion, it must be 1/16 or less. Multiply the maximum motion by 2 pi F to get peak velocity. Remember that peak possible cone motion happens just below system resonance, and is less at higher frequencies. Using 1.5 M/s peak cone velocity, the speed of sound is about 340 M/sec, that should vary all the frequencies whose velocities were supposed to be something else. Usually for the purpose of analysis, we assume that all the other ones are pretty small. Anyhow, with those numbers, you get about 0.44% change in frequency, higher or lower depending which way the cone is moving. Seems about right. If the signal causing the 1.5 meter/sec was 50 Hz , and you had another signal of 4 KHz, then your 4khz note appears to be changing from 4khz to 4017 khz, then back then to a low of 3983 khz, 50 times a second. In the frequency domain (your ears, spectrum analyzer) things get weird. Well, they get Besselized. ;-) The result frequencies (there are more than what you put in) depend on the ratio of the change in frequency divided by the modulating frequency - this is the modulation index - M. The total energy is unchanged, so that the addition of extra stuff comes at the expense the main peak (unlike IM distortion, where the modulating frequency has to add energy). If the modulation index is less than 0.3, then there are 2 extra frequencies (distortion), each one has an amplitude of 1/2 times M (modulation index), or the total grunge is M . For low values of M, you get 2 extra freq., the sum and difference (just like IM distortion, but out of phase with each other, and may sound QUITE different) . At higher M the calculation is very complex, you can have almost all distortion with almost no fundamental. Agreed. Using the above numbers, change in frequency is about 17 Hz, modulation freq. is 50 Hz, so M=0.34 , or about 17% for each extra frequency. These will be at 4050 and 3950. This is NOT IM distortion. Well, its not AM distortion. Whether FM distortion is IM is controversial. I think that FM is IM because that's what the words seem to mean to me. The thing to note is that theamount of distortion changes with modulating frequency! At 10Hz modulating freq,. M is about 1.7 - that will mess up the waveform badly. The worst case is when the frequencies are very different. With high values of M, the note spreads out in frequency - instead of a fundamental and two satellite tones, there is an almost contiuous block of frequencies. With a 5 or 10 Hz modulation, instead of 4 KHz and 2 extra peaks, you get an almost continuous band of frequencies around 4 KHz. That agrees with experimental results. However, you can get a similar family of tones if your modulating signal is not a pure sine wave. The sound? High M values are VERY noticeable, usually a warbling sound, or noticeable extra frequencies. As M decreases to about 0.3, the original pure tone sounds indistinct in pitch, or you might just notice extra "stuff", and as M decreases to less than 0.1, it's very hard to tell (for me). These were done at 4 KHz, with varying amplitudes and frequency of the modulation frequency. This was not a really good listening test, the real Golden Ears might be better at finding the threshold. I used 2 signal generators, one modulating the others frequency. One can also use the tone generator in Audition/CE or a bunch of other software. Then, everything is rigidly phase locked. I used a spectrum analyzer to determine M, and adjusted the signal generators to vary M as I listened to the "tones". My good signal generators are at work, so if you're interested, I can compare IM and FM (Doppler) distortion with the same frequencies. I'm sure Arny has the equipment more readily available - and may even have .wav files for your listening pleasure, so you can hear for yourself what the effects are. Slightly different context, but its all FM: http://www.pcabx.com/technical/jitter_power/index.htm What would be really nice, is to frequency shift a chunk of music with different delta-freq, and different modulation frequencies, i.e., varying M with different conditions. Multi-tone and real music should the preferred way to check this out. It's just a matte of twidding in the parameters with software like Audition/CE. The cure? Keep wide ranges of frequencies OUT of a loudspeaker, i.e., use 2 or 3 way systems. Because the modulation index (M) is calculated with the modulating frequency as DENOMINATOR, avoiding low modulating frequencies reduces the distortion. That bears out in my listening tests. As the modulating frequency increases, the less noticeable things are. A 3 way system can have a 10 to 1 range of frequencies for each driver, compared to almost a 1000 to 1 range for a singe wide range speaker. That will make a big difference when you calculate M, the modulation index. Agreed, and since 2-way speakers are almost endemic.., and get to be 3-way when subwoofers are added... |
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On Thu, 19 Aug 2004 11:03:32 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: ......some stuff deleted..... I'm sure Arny has the equipment more readily available - and may even have .wav files for your listening pleasure, so you can hear for yourself what the effects are. Slightly different context, but its all FM: http://www.pcabx.com/technical/jitter_power/index.htm What would be really nice, is to frequency shift a chunk of music with different delta-freq, and different modulation frequencies, i.e., varying M with different conditions. Multi-tone and real music should the preferred way to check this out. I tried listening to your jitter samples in a less than optimum environment. You have some castanet samples castanets-060.wav (unjittered) and castanets_060_jit-20FF2.wav (-20 db 60 Hz jitter). I can barely tell them apart. To my ears, the jitter version is slightly duller, but the difference is so tiny, I could easily be fooled. All the other samples are far too similiar to the reference. Your piano selections (piano1_1644.wav [unjittered] and piano1_1644_-20FF2.wav [-20db 60 Hz jitter])are indistinguishable to me. I noticed that they are both distorted somewhat, nowhere as nice as your reference piano_nlref.wav file. Either my ears are totally wrecked (not likely), but the jitter (FM) page you have really makes the case that it is not a very big deal. From your spectral analysis, most of the crud is very close to the fundamentals, and as such will be largely masked. Have you synthesized higher or lower frequency jitter components to see their audibility? What is the prevaling opinion about the jitter (or FM "distortion") samples you put on your site? From my own testing, the sidebands need to be more like -10db (or -10 db jitter as you specify it) before they begin to be audible. That's pretty disgusting! 30% crud! Masking theory does confirm what my ears tell me, namely that junk very close to the fundamental is very well masked i.e., inaudible. It interesting that conventional spectrum analyzers have the same difficulty. The ear does have much of the behaviour of a poor dynamic range (30db) spectrum analyzer, with strange post processing and AGC. Readers of this newsgroup would be well advised to read up about the ear (especially the cochlea) to understand masking and other mechanisms the ears uses as "garbage cleanup". -Paul .................................................. ............. Paul Guy Somewhere in the Nova Scotia fog |
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![]() Well, I've asked for help on the general equation for pressure at a point removed from an ideal piston in an infinite tube as a function of the force applied to the piston that includes the effects of Doppler distortion in alt.sci.physicw and on the moderated group sci.physics.research where the real guns hang out and there has been no answer. What I've found is that any attempt to write the expression from conditions at the interface results in a recursion or infinite regress unless the term included to account for the motion of the piston is set to zero. It's really tricky. So let's look at an argument by reciprocity. Assume an acoustic pulse of any arbitrary shape running down the tube with an ideal pistion (no mass, stiff, infinite compliance) in place. 1. The piston will move exactly in step with the motion of the air molecules as the pulse passes by it. Now let's measure and record the velocity of that piston as the pulse passes by. Next let's mount a voltage to velocity transducer, again ideal with a zero mechanical impedence, on the side of the piston from which the pulse came when we measured it. 2. When we drive that piston so as to reproduce the velocity that was recorded we will get the identical pulse propegating off of it as originally measured. 3. Because air is air, the resulting pressure pulse will be in phase with that velocity and given by p(t) = v(t) * Ra, where Ra is the characteristic impedence or air, and that pressure pulse will be identical to the one that the measured pulse had. Because this should be true with a pulse of any shape it will be true of a supposition of any such pulses which implies that it is true of any signal and is thus a linear transducer with no distortion of any kind. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
... 1. The piston will move exactly in step with the motion of the air molecules as the pulse passes by it. Disclaimer: I am *not* stating anything here as an expert in this field. Other than being a musician and doing some recording at home, my only other "experience" in mathematical acoustics was building my own bass cabinet years ago. I used some formulas from a book to cut in the proper port for this particular woofer and cabinet volume. I'm just trying to use logic and imagination. With that said, I respectfully disagree with #1. :-) First, the piston will stop moving at some point and return to its starting position. The air molecules will keep moving until they run out of energy. Second, think about there being two pulses. If the second pulse arrives after the piston returns to its starting position, then the duration between the pulses will be exactly known. Therefore, the frequency of the pulses is exactly known. If the second pulse arrives while the piston is still moving forward with the first pulse, then the second pulse strikes the piston while it's in a different position than when the first pulse struck it. That pulse has traveled farther than in our first scenario. If you were to measure the duration between the pulses in this scenario, it would be greater. Therefore, a form of distortion is introduced. Another way to imagine this is if the piston did *not* return to its starting point. Assume at some known point in relation to the energy of the wave that the wave can no longer push the piston. The piston then becomes stationary at that new position. The next pulse that came along would strike it at some distance X from where the first pulse struck it. This pulse in turn would carry it some distance. Then the next pulse and so forth. No one would argue that such a piston would accurately reflect the frequency of the pulses. That would be Doppler in its truest form, right? Let's resolve this premise before we move on. |
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![]() Jim Carr wrote: With that said, I respectfully disagree with #1. :-) Respectfully accepted as such. :-) First, the piston will stop moving at some point and return to its starting position. The air molecules will keep moving until they run out of energy. No, I specified that the piston have infinite compliance and zero mass and I should have added, no friction. If that is true, it will follow the motion of the air just because there is no reason for it not to. Piston motion is in response to the difference in pressure on each side. Since mass, compliance and friction are not restraining it, it moves so that the pressure differential is always zero. To do that, it must move with the air particles because not doing so is the only way to generate a pressure differential. This is a key point. This part is only gendanken to come up with a signal to be reproduced. If the driven, reproducing piston contains mass, non-zero compliance or friction, which are all linear, then the driving signal can be pre-compensated by the inverse of the resulting mechanical impedence so as to eliminate their effects and result in the motion required by the signal. These things are all logically between the signal and the piston/air interface so have no effect on what happens there in the sense of a distortion mechanism. Second, think about there being two pulses. If the second pulse arrives after the piston returns to its starting position, then the duration between the pulses will be exactly known. Therefore, the frequency of the pulses is exactly known. If the second pulse arrives while the piston is still moving forward with the first pulse, then the second pulse strikes the piston while it's in a different position than when the first pulse struck it. That pulse has traveled farther than in our first scenario. If you were to measure the duration between the pulses in this scenario, it would be greater. Therefore, a form of distortion is introduced. If the principle is true for any arbitrary pulse, and that was a starting propositon, then it is true for the superpostion of any number of pulses because any superposition is just another arbitrary pulse. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
... First, the piston will stop moving at some point and return to its starting position. The air molecules will keep moving until they run out of energy. No, I specified that the piston have infinite compliance and zero mass and I should have added, no friction. If that is true, it will follow the motion of the air just because there is no reason for it not to. Let's start here. Air is made up of a bunch of loosely packed molecules constantly and randomly banging into one another. Am I correct? If so, suppose I manage to start a single pulse by some method that is hopefully immaterial. Air molecules start banging into each other in essentially one direction. Now, I grant they spread out, but there is a pattern when compared to the normal random collisions. Each collision uses up some energy. Eventually there's not enough energy for any more collisions. Would you agree or disagree that this happens? If you agree, then we can say that a sound wave is not really a set of air molecules going from point A to point B but rather *energy* traveling from point A to point B through a series of air molecules colliding in an identifiable pattern we call a wave. Can we agree on that? Again, I want to repeat that I am simply building up a theory from a relatively small base of knowledge and what I hope is some sound logic. If I sound condescending, then I am doing so to myself, not you. I am trying to lay this out so *I* understand what I'm talking about. :-) So let's shove your piston in there. By definition the piston is not really following the motion of the air because the air really isn't moving like a breeze. It has to react to the energy hitting it just like the air molecules do. Therefore, to say the piston "follows the motion of the air" is imprecise. What I think you are trying to say is that the piston is acted upon by the energy of the sound wave in the *exact* same way as the air molecules. So, how far does it move? The exact same distance as one molecule of air moves? If so, I doubt we could induce a voltage in a coil. Since we are in fact talking about inducing voltage in a coil and and in the case of a speaker the subsequent movement of a piston in reaction to that voltage, we have to include that parameter as part of the discussion. Doppler distortion wouldn't exist if the piston *only* moved like a single molecule. The piston must move the coil to induce a voltage. It has to move a finite and extremely limited distance compared to distance the energy from a sound wave travels. The piston also must move backwards at some point otherwise it would only react to the first pulse. In my opinion there is no possible way to find a formula to describe Doppler Distortion without these limiting factors of the piston. Without using any formula I would say that Doppler Distortion comes about *because* the piston moves a greater distance and at a slower speed than energy through the air and because the piston also has a device which pulls it back to center whereas the air molecules do not. It sounds like you're trying to say that your imaginary piston (which can never exist, BTW) would behave exactly as the air molecules do, therefore, there is no distortion. Of course not. Your constraints on the piston essentially describe a single molecule of air. There's no way to pick a molecule of air and say that's distortion. The movement of the molecule as the energy passes through it is what we're trying to measure in the first place. The reality is that the piston does *not* act like an air molecule, so you need to look for a way to explain the vibration of the piston and contrast that against the vibration of air molecules. It's that difference that causes Doppler Distortion as I understand it. |
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![]() Jim Carr wrote: No, I specified that the piston have infinite compliance and zero mass and I should have added, no friction. If that is true, it will follow the motion of the air just because there is no reason for it not to. Let's start here. Air is made up of a bunch of loosely packed molecules constantly and randomly banging into one another. Am I correct? At the lowest level, but for the purposes of acoustics, and other than in consideration of noise, they can be statistically treated as a continuous compressible gas from which the acoustic laws are derived. In brief you need not consider the molecular compostion in working with its dynamics. If you agree, then we can say that a sound wave is not really a set of air molecules going from point A to point B but rather *energy* traveling from point A to point B through a series of air molecules colliding in an identifiable pattern we call a wave. Can we agree on that? Again, I want to repeat that I am simply building up a theory from a relatively small base of knowledge and what I hope is some sound logic. If I sound condescending, then I am doing so to myself, not you. I am trying to lay this out so *I* understand what I'm talking about. :-) With that, I think you stated what I did above in a different way. Yes I agree. So let's shove your piston in there. By definition the piston is not really following the motion of the air because the air really isn't moving like a breeze. It has to react to the energy hitting it just like the air molecules do. Therefore, to say the piston "follows the motion of the air" is imprecise. Not so. It is constrained by the condition that no pressure differential, dP, is allowed across it because of its ideal definition. If it did, it would accelerate at infinite rate. A=dP*D/M. A is infinite because M is zero. D is the diameter. The only way it can maintain that is to move with the bulk velocity of the air so as to keep dP equal to zero. Think of it as a compressible fluid. If you think of an infinitessimal volume of that fluid, the piston will move in concert with those volumes that are in contact with it. To do otherwise would create a pressure difference from one side to the other and it would move to zero it without delay. That's what it is doing, moving without delay to keep the pressure differential at zero. Since it is never at any other value than zero, it is moving precisely with the bulk velocity of the air. Since we are in fact talking about inducing voltage in a coil and and in the case of a speaker the subsequent movement of a piston in reaction to that voltage, we have to include that parameter as part of the discussion. What parameter is that? The piston must move the coil to induce a voltage. It has to move a finite and extremely limited distance compared to distance the energy from a sound wave travels. The piston also must move backwards at some point otherwise it would only react to the first pulse. We need not consider coils or voltages at the point of determining the velocity of that ideal piston. In my opinion there is no possible way to find a formula to describe Doppler Distortion without these limiting factors of the piston. Without using any formula I would say that Doppler Distortion comes about *because* the piston moves a greater distance and at a slower speed than energy through the air and because the piston also has a device which pulls it back to center whereas the air molecules do not. But you can't say that without writing some formula. I say it can't be written because it would violate the conditions I described which are due to physical laws. It sounds like you're trying to say that your imaginary piston (which can never exist, BTW) Doesn't matter because if the ideal case can't generate Doppler distortion then nothing can that contains linear components of friction, mass and compliance. I showed how their effects could be eliminated in the reproducer in the post you are responding to. The ideal measuring device just tells you what the velocity is without disturbing the acoustic field it measures. would behave exactly as the air molecules do, therefore, there is no distortion. Of course not. Your constraints on the piston essentially describe a single molecule of air. There's no way to pick a molecule of air and say that's distortion. The movement of the molecule as the energy passes through it is what we're trying to measure in the first place. To refute my argument you have to show that an ideal passive piston wouldn't track the bulk velocity of the medium. You don't need to interact with it in a signifigant way to measure it's velocity, you could use a laser interferometer, for example (which has in fact been proposed for a microphone sensor.) All I've really described is a large, ideal microphone. The reality is that the piston does *not* act like an air molecule, so you need to look for a way to explain the vibration of the piston and contrast that against the vibration of air molecules. It's that difference that causes Doppler Distortion as I understand it. If you followed it, you should be able to see by now why it would. Remember, we are considering the net effect of a whole lot of these molecules. If you won't accept any of these arguments would you accept that there is some way in principle to measure the bulk velocity without distrubing what you are measuring, at least for all practical purposes? How about tracking the motion of a smoke particle? If you can then we can move on to the reproduction half of the problem. It wasn't really necessasary to employ the piston for measurement but it illustrates the principle of reciprocity of measurement and transduction which is well known. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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"Jim Carr" wrote in message news:JvERc.3628$yh.1495@fed1read05...
Let's start here. Air is made up of a bunch of loosely packed molecules constantly and randomly banging into one another. Am I correct? Yes, and, in fact, it can be considered NEARLY and ideal gas for the purpose of most human-tolerable sound pressure levels, that is, it can be considered a medium consisting of infinitesimally small point objects engaged in (nearly) perfect elestic collisions, If so, suppose I manage to start a single pulse by some method that is hopefully immaterial. Air molecules start banging into each other in essentially one direction. Now, I grant they spread out, but there is a pattern when compared to the normal random collisions. Each collision uses up some energy. Eventually there's not enough energy for any more collisions. Would you agree or disagree that this happens? Physics would disagree quite vehemently. The collisions themselves are damned near perfectly lossless. Thus, the collisions themselves dissipate essentially NO energy whatseoever. Now, what DO you think happens to the energy? If you agree, then we can say that a sound wave is not really a set of air molecules going from point A to point B but rather *energy* traveling from point A to point B through a series of air molecules colliding in an identifiable pattern we call a wave. WOW! What a neat f*cking idea! Analyzing sound based on the concepts of the kinetic theory of gasses! Keep going, gents, and you may well figure out why a substantial portion of the sacrosanct "principles" of audio, notably a bunch of religiously held believes by the high-end, is really a big stinking crock of sh*t. Okay, let's get back to it. If you're assertion is that we're adding some energy to a group of molecules, what do you think that means? What KIND of energy? Well, according to you, these things are moving around and bumping into each other. If you add energy to them by bumping into them, what kind of energy are you adding to them. you have two choices: kinietic or potential. (hint: it's kinetic because bumping into makes them move a little faster). Now, if you guessed "kinetic" then you're probably right. Now, remeber back to your high-school physics class. By moving the piston you've added some energy, and the average energy of our gas molecules has gone up (we talk about the "average" because it makes no sense to talk about one: one molecule does not propogate sound). What's another name for the "average kinetic energy" of a gas? (hint: it's spelled t-e-m-p-e-r-a-t-u-r-e). So, if you now guessed temperature, you'd probably get a point for that question. Fine, so pushing the piston in THAT direction raises the temperature of the air, because it raises the temperature of the air, because the two are saying EXACTLY the same thing. (and, if you wanted to, you could say that it raises the average molecular velocity as well, since, very simply, e = 1/2 mv^2. Given that each m is VERY small, what do you think v is equal to at room temperature?) Now, if I raise the temperture of a gas HERE, what do you think happens to the gas THERE? (hint: think about how something wants to maintain equilibrium with its surrounding). How do you think it will do this, and how fast do you think it will do so? So let's shove your piston in there. By definition the piston is not really following the motion of the air because the air really isn't moving like a breeze. It has to react to the energy hitting it just like the air molecules do. Therefore, to say the piston "follows the motion of the air" is imprecise. The piston, if allowed to move, will do so ONLY if there is a net force on it. Assume the gas currounding the piston is of uniform composition and density, it can only do so if the average net force of collisions on one side is gerater than that on the other, and, given the assumptions of identical composition and density, can only do so if the average collision velocity is different. And since the everage kinetic energy of the gas geos as the square of the average velocity, and since the temperature is a direct measure of the avergae kinetic energy, guess what: a net force on the diaphragm means a NET INSTANTANEOUS PRESSURE DIFFERENCE between the two sides. What I think you are trying to say is that the piston is acted upon by the energy of the sound wave in the *exact* same way as the air molecules. So, how far does it move? The exact same distance as one molecule of air moves? Depends upon how far the higher temperature side must move the diaphragm such that it imparts enough energy on the other side such that it reaches mechanical (and, indeed, euivalently) THERMAL equilibrium with it, OR it reaches mechanical equilibrium with whatever other force pooses its motion. The reality is that the piston does *not* act like an air molecule, And, in a more precise fashion, there is no analysis of a single molecule can lead to any clue about the propogation of sound. need to look for a way to explain the vibration of the piston and contrast that against the vibration of air molecules. It's that difference that causes Doppler Distortion as I understand it. Consider the following analytical tool: instead of a physical diaphragm, look at the flow of energy past an arbitrary plane at right angles to the flow of energy: can we consider the bulk proprties of the gas or must we analyze each individual molecule as it interacts with this plane? (hint, if you choose the latter, we'll all die before you come back with an answer). There's a LOT more lurking under here than you might imagine, but the power of it is rather immense. |
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![]() Jim Carr wrote: Disclaimer: I am *not* stating anything here as an expert in this field. You will be when I'm done with you. :-) Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
... Jim Carr wrote: Disclaimer: I am *not* stating anything here as an expert in this field. You will be when I'm done with you. :-) LOL! You guys make me think, that's for sure. I contrast this against the football newsgroup I'm in that spent the off-season arguing the question: If you were filming Hillary Clinton swimming and you saw she was drowing, what would you do? |
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![]() Jim Carr wrote: "Bob Cain" wrote in message ... Jim Carr wrote: Disclaimer: I am *not* stating anything here as an expert in this field. You will be when I'm done with you. :-) LOL! You guys make me think, that's for sure. I contrast this against the football newsgroup I'm in that spent the off-season arguing the question: If you were filming Hillary Clinton swimming and you saw she was drowing, what would you do? I give. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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Aargh! I sent that by accident. It is a work in progress and
The final conclusion remains to be written or justified. That conclusion is, however, that a pressure signal, such as is present in recordings, is just as linearly reproduced by a force driven piston and that Doppler distortion doesn't exist. I really love that hat. In the mean time I'd appreciate it if any tech-heads can find flaw so far. The three points on which the last paragraph is based should be enough to support it and seem, to me anyway, to be unassailable. Have at it. Bob Bob Cain wrote: Well, I've asked for help on the general equation for pressure at a point removed from an ideal piston in an infinite tube as a function of the force applied to the piston that includes the effects of Doppler distortion in alt.sci.physicw and on the moderated group sci.physics.research where the real guns hang out and there has been no answer. What I've found is that any attempt to write the expression from conditions at the interface results in a recursion or infinite regress unless the term included to account for the motion of the piston is set to zero. It's really tricky. So let's look at an argument by reciprocity. Assume an acoustic pulse of any arbitrary shape running down the tube with an ideal pistion (no mass, stiff, infinite compliance) in place. 1. The piston will move exactly in step with the motion of the air molecules as the pulse passes by it. Now let's measure and record the velocity of that piston as the pulse passes by. Next let's mount a voltage to velocity transducer, again ideal with a zero mechanical impedence, on the side of the piston from which the pulse came when we measured it. 2. When we drive that piston so as to reproduce the velocity that was recorded we will get the identical pulse propegating off of it as was originally measured. 3. Because air is air, the resulting pressure pulse will be in phase with that velocity and given by p(t) = v(t) * Ra, where Ra is the characteristic impedence or air, and that pressure pulse will be identical to the one that the measured pulse had. Because this should be true with a pulse of any shape it will be true of a supposition of any such pulses which implies that it is true of any signal and is thus a linear transducer with no distortion of any kind. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
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On Sun, 08 Aug 2004 18:45:54 -0700, Bob Cain
wrote: Well, I've asked for help on the general equation for pressure at a point removed from an ideal piston in an infinite tube as a function of the force applied to the piston that includes the effects of Doppler distortion in alt.sci.physicw and on the moderated group sci.physics.research where the real guns hang out and there has been no answer. What I've found is that any attempt to write the expression from conditions at the interface results in a recursion or infinite regress unless the term included to account for the motion of the piston is set to zero. It's really tricky. So let's look at an argument by reciprocity. Ah, you are basing your argument on the system being linear with reciprocity and superposition being applicable. Assume an acoustic pulse of any arbitrary shape running down the tube with an ideal pistion (no mass, stiff, infinite compliance) in place. 1. The piston will move exactly in step with the motion of the air molecules as the pulse passes by it. Now let's measure and record the velocity of that piston as the pulse passes by. Next let's mount a voltage to velocity transducer, again ideal with a zero mechanical impedence, on the side of the piston from which the pulse came when we measured it. 2. When we drive that piston so as to reproduce the velocity that was recorded we will get the identical pulse propegating off of it as originally measured. 3. Because air is air, the resulting pressure pulse will be in phase with that velocity and given by p(t) = v(t) * Ra, where Ra is the characteristic impedence or air, and that pressure pulse will be identical to the one that the measured pulse had. Because this should be true with a pulse of any shape it will be true of a supposition of any such pulses which implies that it is true of any signal and is thus a linear transducer with no distortion of any kind. Circular. . . |