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Bob Cain wrote in message ...
Bob Cain wrote: snip.....snip The answer turns out to be simple. If the velocity and position of the particles moving about their rest position at the origin are Vp(t) = Sp'(t) snip......snip The Doppler distortion in a plane wave is a consequence of the non-linear relationship between the signal motion imparted to the air by the driver and the flow velocity (pressure) at a point about which that motion is manifest and measured. For a two tone Vd(t), one at 40 Hz and another at 2 kHz and allowing a motion of 2 cm (a reasonable Xmax for a two way system) the RMS IM distortion sidebands about the 2 kHz fundamental near the speaker face are on the order of .2% of that fundamental. While of some signifigance compared to other portions of an audio chain, it probably isn't for a loudspeaker given its other distortion mechanisms. Bob Does your prediction of 0.2% distortion apply to the situation of a piston in a tube or a piston in an infinite baffle, or doesn't it matter? |
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