Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to point out that many advances in acoustical engineering have been necessary in order to understand and control adequately the conditions under which modern sound pictures are recorded and reproduced. To illustrate this point, some of the acoustical problems encountered at Bell Telephone Laboratories are discussed. The sudden and successive changes in sound intensity level to be expected in a room during the growth and decay of sound from an intermittent source are pointed out. The necessity of using the more general reverberation time formula, which was developed over a year ago, when dealing with coinparatively "dead" rooms, is indicated. One type of acoustical distortion which is due to interference is discussed together with the measures necessary to minimize it in sound pickup work. These phases of acoustical engineering have been selected for discussion from many which confront the engineer in this field.

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