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Decibel
(dB) A customary logarithmic measure most commonly used (in various ways) for measuring sound. Decibel is a way to express the ratio of two sound intensities: dB=10log10I1/I2 being I1 the reference. If one sound is 1 bel (10 decibel) 'louder' than another, this means the louder sound is 10 times louder than the fainter one. A difference of 20 decibel corresponds to an increase of 10 x 10 or 100 times in intensity.
The intensity of ultrasound is measured in db/cm and decreases during the propagation.
For sound pressure (the pressure exerted by the sound waves) 0 decibel equals 20 micropascal (µPa), and for ultrasonic power 0 decibel sometimes equals 1 picowatt.
See also Phon, Pascal, Logarithms, Proportionality Constant, Watt, Diagnostic Imaging.
Phon
A logarithmic measure of sound loudness closely related to the decibel. The unit decibel is used for objective measurements that mean, they measure the actual pressure of the sound waves as recorded using a microphone. The unit phon is used for subjective measurements, which means, measurements made using the ears of a human listener.
A sound has the loudness 'p' phon if it seems to the listener to be equal in loudness to the sound of a pure tone of the frequency 1 kilohertz and strength 'p' decibel. A measurement in phons will be similar to a measurement in decibels, but not identical, since the perceived loudness of a sound depends on the distribution of frequencies in the sound as well as the pressure of the sound waves. In the U.S., sound loudness is frequently measured in sones rather than phons: a sound of loudness x sones has loudness 10 log2 x + 40 phons.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 02:01:00]