Sign in

username:

password:



Not a member?

Search Online Books



Search tips

Free Online Books

Sponsor

Industry's highest performing at the lowest power DSPs now as low as $5.00*
Start development today!
*volume pricing for 10ku

Chapters

See Also

Embedded SystemsFPGAElectronics
Chapter Contents:

Search Physical Audio Signal Processing

  

Book Index | Global Index


Would you like to be notified by email when Julius Orion Smith III publishes a new entry into his blog?

  

Horns as Waveguides

Waves in a horn can be analyzed as one-parameter waves, meaning that it is assumed that a constant-phase wavefront progresses uniformly along the horn. Each ``surface of constant phase'' composing the traveling wave has tangent planes normal to the horn axis and to the horn boundary. For cylindrical tubes, the surfaces of constant phase are planar, while for conical tubes, they are spherical [357,317,144]. The key property of a ``horn'' is that a traveling wave can propagate from one end to the other with negligible ``backscattering'' of the wave. Rather, it is smoothly ``guided'' from one end to the other. This is the meaning of saying that a horn is a ``waveguide''. The absence of backscattering means that the entire propagation path may be simulated using a pure delay line, which is very efficient computationally. Any losses, dispersion, or amplitude change due to horn radius variation (``spreading loss'') can be implemented where the wave exits the delay line to interact with other components.



Subsections
Previous: Non-Cylindrical Acoustic Tubes
Next: Overview of Methods

Order a Hardcopy of Physical Audio Signal Processing


About the Author: Julius Orion Smith III
Julius Smith's background is in electrical engineering (BS Rice 1975, PhD Stanford 1983). He is presently Professor of Music and Associate Professor (by courtesy) of Electrical Engineering at Stanford's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA), teaching courses and pursuing research related to signal processing applied to music and audio systems. See http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/ for details.


Comments


No comments yet for this page


Add a Comment
You need to login before you can post a comment (best way to prevent spam). ( Not a member? )