Elevations are relative to a reference level- almost always sea level. When this is done, it is usually safe to assume the reference is the threshold of hearing.Įlevation in geography works the same way. Decibel values for sounds are often given without a mentioning a reference level (like in the table above). For instance, recording engineers usually use the loudest sound that doesn’t cause distortion as the reference. Sometimes, other references are more convenient. The chart above uses the threshold of hearing as the reference sound. Sound levels show how a sound compares to a reference sound. The most commonly used reference sound is called the threshold of hearing– a barely audible pure tone at 1000 Hz that has a pressure amplitude of 20 μPa and an intensity of 1 pW/m 2. Every extra 10 dB corresponds to a sound that is ten times more intense than before.ĭoes a 60 dB sound have twice the intensity of a 30 dB sound? Sound levels are relative SoundĪ quick look at the chart reveals that sound level is very a different thing than sound intensity. (See chart below for sound levels for common sounds). Sound levelsare expressed in decibels. Sound levels for common sounds cover a range of about 130 dB. Sound pressure is not the same thing as sound pressure level and so on. No matter which term you use, the word “level” is crucial- sound intensity level is not the same thing as sound intensity. Many people use SIL and SPL interchangeably, while others use the phrase sound level instead. There are two common (nearly identical) log scales for expressing sound amplitude: s ound intensity level (SIL)and sound pressure level (SPL). Examples of logs in science include the pH scale (for acids and bases in chemistry), the Richter scale (for earthquakes) and decibel (for sound). Sound levels use the math of logarithms to compress these wide-ranging numbers into something manageable. The numbers are difficult to “grok” and even more inconvenient to work with. Loud sounds can have intensities that trillions of times that of quiet sounds. Sounds humans can tolerate sounds that have pressure amplitudes that are many millions of times larger than the quietest sounds we can hear. Loudness perception 42 Decibels and sound levels Sound Levels
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