Audio generator will produce some range of frequency and level of a test signal meant for audio. A signal generator will produce a test signal but is a more general classification. For example a audio generator is a signal generator. When you know what type of signal you are looking for, then a signal generator will be called that type of signal. all depends on what you are testing. examples: video -> video signal generator audio -> audio signal generator
The Jenn Air Over the Range Microwave oven, has audio signals for a timer.
An audio signal is a representation of sound, typically as an electrical voltage. Audio signals have frequencies in the audio frequency range of roughly 20 to 20,000 Hz (the limits of human hearing).
the audio signal is put on transverse wave .
This converter is for audio only, not for a TV signal.
There is a bit of an argument on the exact baseband pass frequency for telephone audio, but generally it is in the range of 300 hz to 3000 hz.
Dynamic range refers to the ratio between the quietest and loudest parts of an audio signal. In audio, it typically describes the difference between the softest and loudest sounds a system can reproduce. A wide dynamic range is desirable for capturing and reproducing sound with clarity and detail.
microphone............
The relative amplitude (loudness) of an audio signal can vary from soft to very loud. When you normalize an audio signal, you adjust the overall average amplitude to be about same throughout. An audio signal is 'normalized' to a specific numeric value, measured in decibels (e.g. -4db).
Anything that creates electrical sound (aka audio.) A piano is a sound generator but NOT an audio generator. An organ or keyboard is an audio generator and not a sound generator. These can also be thought of as signal oscillators in the 20-20k hz range which usually produce a constant signal or tone over a period of time. Sound is anything you can hear, and audio is anything you need an amplifier to hear.
Because Audio waves move as sound waves through air as condensations and rarefactions or slight compressions and partial vacuums of gas molecules and can be stopped by the walls of a house.
Simply put, it is an "extra" audio input that allows a device to accept the audio signal from an external audio player.