Introduction To Acoustics and Lighting
Introduction To Acoustics and Lighting
The hearing mechanism of the ear senses sound waves, converts them to information, relays it to the brain, brain
interprets the information as sound.
ARCHITECTURAL ACOUSTICS
Effect of building design on sound control in buildings
Principles of acoustics to create a satisfactory acoustical environment
SOUND WAVE: Longitudinal pressure wave in air or an elastic medium especially one producing an audible
sensation 1. Sound wave
2. Increased volume sound wave
3. Increased frequency sound wave
PITCH and FREQUENCY
Frequency is the number of times per second that a vibrating body completes one cycle of motion
Unit for frequency is hertz (Hz = 1 cycle per second)
Low pitched or bass sounds have low frequencies
High-pitched or treble sounds have high frequencies
Normal person can hear frequencies from roughly 20 to 20,000 Hz
Human speech is mainly in the range 300 to 3,000 Hz
DECIBEL (dB) - a logarithmic scale applicable to any parameter.
SOUND PRESSURE LEVEL (Lp)
Sound pressure converted to the decibel scale
SOUND PRESSURE
The amount of air pressure fluctuation a noise source creates. We "hear" or perceive sound pressure as loudness.
Sound pressure is usually expressed in units called pascals (Pa)
SOUND POWER
The sound energy transferred per second from the noise source to the air
Power is expressed in units called watts (W)
Like sound pressure, sound power (in W) is usually expressed as sound power levels in dB.
SOUND POWER LEVEL
Sound power level, Lw, the total sound energy radiated per second.
LOUDNESS
The human impression of the strength of a sound
How is vibration isolated and controlled?
to reduce the problem to a single mass supported by a spring and a damper
REVERBERATION
Prolongation of the sound in the room caused by continued multiple reflections
Concave Reflector
Concave sound-reflecting surfaces (barrel-vaulted ceilings in churches and curved rear walls in auditoriums) focus
sound, causing hot spots and echoes in the audience seating area
Flat Reflector
Flat, hard-surfaced building elements (large enough and oriented properly) effectively distribute reflected sound. The
reflector is tilted slightly to project sound energy toward the rear of an auditorium.
Convex Reflector
Large convex, hard-surfaced building elements are the most effective sound-distributing forms.
The reflected sound energy from convex surfaces diverges, enhances diffusion, desirable for music.
Reflected sound from convex surfaces is more evenly distributed across a wide range of frequencies.
Flat Ceiling
Hard, sound-reflecting flat ceiling provides useful sound reflections covering the entire seating area in a lecture room
Sloped Ceiling
For concert halls: long reverberation, high ceilings, sound-reflecting walls are preferred; ceilings that are diffusing can
improve audibility of lateral sound by diminishing the strength of ceiling reflections
ECHOES
The distinct repetition of the original sound and is sufficiently loud to be clearly heard above the general reverberation
and background noise in a space.
FLUTTER ECHO
Repetitive inter-reflection of sound energy between opposing parallel or concave sound-reflecting surfaces heard as
a high-frequency ringing or buzzing
To prevent flutter echo, avoid parallel surfaces, provide deep sound-absorbing treatment, or break up smooth
surfaces with splayed or ‘scalloped” elements.
DIFFUSION – Scattering or random redistribution of a sound wave from a surface; occurs when the surface depths of
hard-surfaced materials are comparable to the wavelengths of the sound.