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0 votes
2 answers
147 views

Weird looking sine wave behavior in an electric circuit

while studying an RLC circuit I noticed some weird like sine waves at low frequencies (1-9 kHertz) on the inductor, The amplitude behavior did not follow the theoretical model. Instead, suggested the ...
dareen's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
1 answer
33 views

What relationship between the time recording length and the frequency bandwidth?

In model testing for ocean waves, the data recording duration is usually longer the better especially for irregular waves. The recording length shall be long enough to achieve sufficiently small ...
MathArt's user avatar
  • 138
0 votes
2 answers
79 views

I don't understand intuitively why the instantaneous frequency is obtained by calculating the time derivative of the phase

I don't understand intuitively why the instantaneous frequency is obtained by calculating the time derivative of the phase
krunker.io's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
53 views

How to justify sound propagation is a linear time-invariant (LTI) system?

Background A linear time-invariant (LTI) system (black box) is one described by the system: \begin{align} \dot{\xi}(t) & = A\xi(t) + B\omega(t), \; \xi(0) = 0 \label{eq-abc-1}\\ \lambda(t)...
César VB's user avatar
  • 151
0 votes
0 answers
27 views

Comparison between wave equation theory and transfer function theory

I deal with analysis of acoustic signals in solids. And after some literature research in physics and mathematic, I have a question about the followings two theories: Wave equation theory: Imagine I ...
Ronghua Xu's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
47 views

Is it possible to, like white noise, excite all audio frequencies equally, but with a more immediate & less random burst? Like a signal discontinuity?

I am trying to generate an audio signal that, like white noise, has "equal intensity at different frequencies, giving it a constant power spectral density", but unlike white noise, can be ...
mike's user avatar
  • 321
0 votes
0 answers
20 views

FWHM and Beam Width of transmitted beam of ultrasonic (ultrasound) transducer

Im a studying ultrasonic transducer and I got a question about FWHM and Beam Width while solving some problems. In the lecture, I learned that Beam width is calculated by: $2\Delta\theta = \frac{3.8\...
COTHE's user avatar
  • 43
1 vote
0 answers
24 views

Two-Ray Ground-Reflection Model: Understanding the Difference in Phase Offsets at the Receiver

Currently, I'm trying to understand the Two-Ray Ground-Reflection Model. During my research, I came across the following simplification expressing the received power as follows (taken from Wikipedia): ...
Henerii's user avatar
  • 11
0 votes
0 answers
24 views

Is the strongest acoustic signal always the closest?

I have a single beam echosounder that I use to measure the distance to an object underwater. It emits an acoustic pulse and listens to the reflections. Using the time of flight and the strongest ...
Apo's user avatar
  • 1
22 votes
12 answers
8k views

How do computers store sound waves just by sampling the amplitude of a wave and not the frequency?

All of this just doesn’t make sense though. I mean, doesn’t the amplitude represent the loudness and the frequency the pitch? Aren’t they completely independent from each other? Is the book just ...
RedP's user avatar
  • 390
7 votes
2 answers
1k views

Why does superposing an infinite number of waves of different wavenumbers eliminate periodicity and may sometimes result in a localised wave?

I am studying how wave packets are defined in quantum mechanics, but I am finding it hard to intuitively understand why superposing an infinite number of waves of different wavenumbers $k$ may ...
cookiecainsy's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
57 views

Can multi-instrumental sound be reconstructed from a waveform?

This question came about when I saw someone wearing clothing with a waveform on it. I wondered if it would be possible to reconstruct the original sound from the printed waveform. I understand that a ...
mikemaccana's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
555 views

What do I hear when listening to a computer-generated sine wave?

When I use a sine-wave generator (such as this one), I give credit to the software and my hardware that a pure sine wave is produced (as close as is technologically possible) — that is, no harmonics. ...
Aaron's user avatar
  • 173
0 votes
2 answers
47 views

How to convert from a wave-reading?

I have a series of wave-readings which show wave amplitudes pr. time unit for different events. So on the $x $-axis we have seconds, and on the $y$-axis, wave height. If I want to convert this to a ...
Superunknown's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
83 views

Signal Processing – Discrete Fourier Transform and Incomplete Fourier Series

I'm working on a paper where I'm collecting sound pressure data from a chord's wave and trying to create a frequency spectrum to find the individual frequencies that make up the chord. However, I can'...
Dr. Math's user avatar

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