▲ | Rooster61 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Is the phenomenon here why when you lay a sound waveform over another which is exactly out of phase copy (try this in Audacity or similar), the final product is silence? Or is that another aspect of sound waves that is similar but not quite the same effect? | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | drjasonharrison 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
This is exactly the physics occuring. Amplitude of sound is pressure. When two signals are 180 degrees out of phase, one is "increases the pressure" while the other "decreases the pressure" of the air. In an sound editor, the waveforms can be perfectly aligned. In the physical world, the waveform created by the fan spreads out through space. Providing an opposite but equal sound waveform at your ears is very hard (impossible) with a single speaker but can be done with sound cancelling headphones. | |||||||||||||||||
|