Loudness is the quality of a sound that is the primary psychological correlate of physical strength or amplitude. Loudness is a subjective felt impression and is in some way related to the objective measure of the sound pressure.
Neither our ear drums nor the microphone diaphragms can convert acoustic intensity. Therefore only use the sound pressure for measuring. To measure the loudness feeling is a difficult thing.
The loudness of 1 sone equals the loudness level of 40 phons (at 1 kHz).
More energy.
Loudness is a measure of how much energy is in the wave. Waves with greater amplitude have more energy and when they interact with a receiving instrument, like an ear, the wave converts that additional energy into greater vibrations in the receiver.
When the amplitude of any wave is increased, the amount of stuff vibrating is being caused to increase its amount of vibration. For sound, increased amplitude of the compression wave is an increase in the pressure variation (both higher and lower) in the wave.
Compressing a gas takes energy. When a gas is compressed, it has potential energy, i.e. it has energy equal to the amount of work it took to compress the gas. Similarly, creating the compression and rarefaction that constitutes a sound wave takes energy. That wave moves and the energy moves. (Technically, the motion of the wave is this displacement of the location of the wave disturbance, not the displacement of the material through which the wave is propagating.)
To increase the amplitude of a sound wave, the source must vibrate with greater movements and that creates higher compression pressures and lower rarefactions pressures in the sound wave and the sound wave has more energy and the wave has a greater amplitude. It is then detected as louder.
As we increase the amplitude then intensity of sound increases. The physical term is intensity. Practically we mean it as loudness. More amplitude then loud sound. If amplitude is less then sound is so soft.
I do not have a specific way of doing this, however you would capture the frequency of the sound and recreate it with larger compressions to recreate the longitudinal waves with a greater number of molecules per wave transfering the frequency.
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I.e., you would pick up the sound with a microphone to turn it into an electrical signal you can amplify to a larger-amplitude signal then use a loudspeaker to convert that back to sound. Frequency does not come into this. Nor does the number of air molecules - but you make them move more closely together and further apart, so increasing the wave's amplitude..
In that event, the sound is perceived as getting louder.
If you increase the amplitude of a sound wave the sound becomes louder.
The sound will become louder
The loudness of a sound is the same thing as the overall amplitude of a sound. When measuring sound, in general, you have pitch (frequency) and tone (amplitude, the measure of loudness). So, if you increase the amplitude of a sound wave pattern, you increase the overall intensity of the sound (the energy), and that can be measured on the logarithmic scale of decibels, since an unconstrained, undirected sound wave carries its energy outward in all directions, in an increasing volume of air (or other medium).
Amplitude is the energy of a sound wave, which we also call Loudness
A sound wave that has a large amplitude carries a lot of energy because the higher the waves amplitude the louder (more powerful or energetic) the wave will be. apex answer: high amplitude
Hang reflecting panels from the ceiling behind the Orchestra.
Loudness is affected by parameters other than sound pressure, including frequency and duration. also sound wave amplitude
Loudness increases with increasing amplitude of the sound wave, also called increasing sound pressure.
The type of wave in which amplitude changes to create sound is a sound wave. Amplitude is the measure of the changes within the wave.
Amplitude is the maximum displacement of a wave. The amplitude determine the loudness of the sound
the amplitude of a sound wave is the air around you's temperature and the time of sound timed together. +++ No - the amplitude of any wave is its "height", which in sound is the wave's pressure. Time and temperature are not involved in amplitude.
The amplitude of a sound wave is the measure of the intensity of the sound, such as loudness.
amplitude is the height of the sound wave.
The wave in which amplitude changes to create sound is a sound wave. The intensity of the wave will be changed by energy.
No. Amplitude refers to the height of a wave. If the wave is a sound wave a larger amplitude would mean a louder sound.
The amplitude of a sound wave is perceived as the sound's loudness.
Amplitude. As the amplitude of the sound wave increases, the sound becomes louder.
The amplitude (The height of the wave) of the wave increases as the sound gets louder.
Amplitude is the maximum extent of vibration of a body from its mean position. The amplitude of a sound wave indicates the loudness of the sound.