Title: Chapter 8 Electromagnetism and EM Waves (Section 4)
1Chapter 8Electromagnetism and EM Waves(Section
4)
28.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- A hundred years or so ago, the only people who
listened to music performed by world class
musicians were those few who could attend live
performances. - Today, people in the most remote corners of the
world can hear concert-quality sound from large
home entertainment systems, pocket-sized or
smaller MP3 players, and many devices in between.
38.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- The first Edison phonographs were strictly
mechanical and did a fair job of reproducing
sound. - It was the invention of electronic recording and
playback machines that brought true high fidelity
to sound reproduction. - The sequence that begins with sound in a
recording studio and ends with the reproduced
sound coming from a speaker in your home,
headphones or earbuds, or car includes components
that use electromagnetism.
48.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- The key to electronic sound recording and
playback is first to translate the sound into an
alternating current and then later retranslate
the AC back into sound. - The first step requires a microphone, and the
second step requires a speaker. - Although there are several different types of
microphones, we will take a look at what is
called a dynamic microphone.
58.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Although there are several different types of
microphones, we will take a look at what is
called a dynamic microphone. - It consists of a magnet surrounded by a coil of
wire attached to a diaphragm.
68.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- The coil and diaphragm are free to oscillate
relative to the stationary magnet. - When sound waves reach the microphone, the
pressure variations in the wave push the
diaphragm back and forth, making it and the coil
oscillate. - Because the coil is moving relative to the
magnet, an oscillating current is induced in it.
78.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- The frequency of the AC in the coil is the same
as the frequency of the diaphragms oscillation,
which is the same as the frequency of the
original sound. - That is all it takes.
- This type of dynamic microphone is referred to as
a moving coil microphone. - The alternative is to attach a small magnet to
the diaphragm and keep the coil stationarya
moving magnet microphone.
88.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Lets skip ahead now to when the sound is played
back. - The output of the CD player, radio, or other
audio component is an alternating current that
has to be converted back into sound by a speaker.
- The basic speaker is quite similar to a dynamic
microphone.
98.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- In this case, the coil (called the voice coil) is
connected to a stiff paper cone instead of to a
diaphragm.
108.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Recall that an alternating current in the voice
coil in the presence of the magnet will cause the
coil to experience an alternating force. - The voice coil and the speaker cone oscillate
with the same frequency as the AC input. - The oscillating paper cone produces a
longitudinal wave in the airsound. - The tiny speakers built into earbud earphones now
commonly used with iPods and other portable music
devices operate by these same principles.
118.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- They are made possible by the use of small but
powerful permanent magnets made of an alloy of
the elements neodymium, iron, and boron (NIB). - The extreme strength of NIB magnets (which in
some cases can approach that of large medical
MRIs) makes them capable of reproducing a very
broad range of frequencies with exceptional
fidelity. - Coupled with their small size, this has made them
indispensable in the design of compact earphones.
128.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Microphones and speakers are classified as
transducers - They convert mechanical oscillation from sound
into AC (microphone), or they convert AC into
mechanical oscillation and sound (speaker) - They are almost identical.
- In fact, a microphone can be used as a speaker,
and a speaker can be used as a microphone. - But, as with motors and generators, each is best
at doing what it is designed to do.
138.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Most sound recording, from simple cassette
recorders to sophisticated studio tape machines,
is done on magnetic tape. - The tape is a plastic film coated with a thin
layer of fine ferromagnetic particles that retain
magnetism. - Sound is recorded on the tape using a recording
head, a ring-shaped electromagnet with a very
narrow gap.
148.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- During recording, an AC signal (from a
microphone, for example) produces an alternating
magnetic field in the gap of the recording head. - As the tape is pulled past the gap, the particles
in each part of the tape are magnetized according
to the polarity of the heads magnetic field at
the instant they are in the gap. - The polarity of the particles changes from
northsouth to southnorth, and so on, along the
length of the tape.
158.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- To play back the recording, the tape is pulled
past a playback head, often the same head used
for recording. - The magnetic field of the particles in the tape
oscillates back and forth and induces an
oscillating magnetic field in the tape head. - This oscillating magnetic field induces an
oscillating current (AC) in the coil - electromagnetic induction again
168.4 Applications to Sound Reproduction
- Magnetic recording is not limited to sound
reproduction. - Television videocassette recorders (VCRs) record
both sound and visual images on magnetic tape. - Computers store information magnetically on
tapes, floppy discs, and hard discs.
178.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- A revolution in sound reproduction occurred in
the 1980s with the advent of digital sound
reproduction, the method used in compact discs
(CDs) and various computer sound file formats,
including MP3. - In a process known as analog-to-digital
conversion, the sound wave to be recorded is
measured and stored as numbers.
188.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- For CDs, the actual voltage of the AC signal from
a microphone is measured 44,100 times each second.
198.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- Note that this frequency is more than twice the
highest frequency that people can hear. - The waveform of the sound is chopped up into
tiny segments and then recorded as numerical
values. - These numbers are stored as binary numbers using
0s and 1s, just as information is stored in
computers.
208.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- To play back the sound, a digital-to-analog
conversion process reconstructs the sound wave by
generating an AC signal whose voltage at each
instant in time equals the numerical value
originally recorded. - After being smoothed with an electronic filter,
the waveform is an almost perfect copy of the
original.
218.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- A huge amount of data is associated with digital
sound reproductionmillions of numbers for each
minute of music. CDs (and DVDs) store these data
in the form of microscopic pits in a spiral line
several miles long.
228.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- A tiny laser focused on the pits reads them as 0s
and 1s. - The amount of information stored on a 70-minute
CD is equivalent to more than a dozen full-length
encyclopedias. - A standard DVD can store about seven times as
much data, and new Blu-ray discs (which employ
special blue lasers to scan the pits) can handle
as much as 40 times more. - Little wonder that CDs and DVDs have also been
embraced by the personal-computer industry as a
way to store huge amounts of information in
durable, portable form.
238.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- The superior quality of digital sound comes about
because the playback device looks only for
numbers. - It can ignore such things as imperfections in the
disc or tape, the weak random magnetization in a
tape that becomes tape hiss on cassettes, and the
mechanical vibration of motors that we hear as a
rumble on phonographs. - A sophisticated error-correction system can even
compensate for missing or garbled numbers.
248.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- Because the pickup device in a CD player does not
touch the disc, each CD can be played over and
over without the slow deterioration in quality
that results from a needle moving in a phonograph
groove or from the constant unwinding and
rewinding of a cassette tape over the recorder
heads. - This combination of high fidelity and disc
durability made the CD system an immediate hit
with consumers.
258.4 Applications to Sound ReproductionDigital
Sound
- This is just a glimpse of some of the factors in
state-of-the-art high-fidelity sound
reproduction. - Perhaps we are all so accustomed to it that we
cannot appreciate how much of a technological
miracle it really is. - The next time you listen to high-quality recorded
music, remember that it is all possible because
of the basic interactions between electricity and
magnetism.