Acoustic Glossary
Sound and Vibration Terms, Units and Parameters
B
B-weighting : no longer in common use, was used by the motor industry for many years. A frequency weighting with more 'weight' at low frequencies than the
A-weighting network.
Background Noise : the noise at a given location and time, measured in the absence of any alleged noise nuisance sources, also known as
residual noise. The L
AF90 - level exceeded for 90% of the measured time - is commonly used. see also
statistical analysis.
Backward Curve Integration : method for calculating
reverberation time from the impulse noise decay curve. Also known as the
Schroeder method.
Balanced Noise Criteria : is a refinement of NC
Noise Criteria. The rating is determined by the SIL
speech interference level and gets the Classification (R) for Rumble if the spectrum is rich in low frequency sound, the Classification H for Hiss if the spectrum is rich in high frequency sound, or Classification (RV) for Rattle and Vibration and Rattle if the low frequency spectra is likely to produce audible rattling in lightweight building elements.
Band : any segment of the frequency spectrum.
Band Pass Filter : a filter covering a band of
frequencies from a lower cut-off frequency to an upper cut-off frequency. Outside the filter bandwidth, the signal is attenuated.
Bandwidth : -3 dB : range of frequencies usually in standard sizes i.e.
octave or
1/3-octave bands. The lower and upper frequencies are also known as the -3 dB or half-power points.
Bar : unit of atmospheric pressure, equal to 1000 millibars, one million dynes per square centimetre, 100 kilopascals or 29.53 inches of mercury.
Bark : the human ear combines sounds of similar frequency into frequency bands, called
'critical bands'. Dr
Zwicker divided the audio spectrum into 24 critical bands and named the units 'barks'. See also
loudness .
Beat Frequency : if two vibration components are quite close together in frequency and if they are present at the same time at the same place, they will combine in such a way that their sum will vary in level up and down at a rate equal to the difference in frequency between the two components. This phenomenon is known as beating, and its frequency is the beat frequency.
Bel : B : a
logarithmic measure of sound levels relative to a reference or threshold level. In practice, sound levels are almost always stated in
decibels. One bel is equal to 10 decibels, dB and because it is a ratio of two quantities it is dimensionless.
Bow-tie Correction : multispectra measurements for correlation functions are performed using
spectrum averaging. Half of the normal time record is set to zero. Accordingly, correlation functions for continuous signals will decrease with the delay. The bow-tie correction compensates for this.
Broadband Noise : also called wideband noise - noise whose energy is distributed over a wide section of the audible range as opposed to narrow band noise.
Buffer : a memory location in a computer or digital instrument that is set aside for temporary storage of digital information while it is waiting to be processed.
Building Acoustics : see -
Ctr,
DnT,w,
flanking,
L'nT,w,
reverberation
Other Glossary Terms
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