| Absorption |
In acoustics, the changing
of sound energy to heat. |
| Acoustics |
The science of sound
propagation. It can also refer to the effect a given environment has
on sound. |
| Ambience |
Acoustical qualities
of a room and its contents. |
| Ambience |
The acoustical reverberation
characteristics of a given space. |
| Aspect Ratio |
This describes the width
of a picture to the height. The NTSC standard is 4:3. The current
HDTV standard is 16:9. Modern movies range from 1.66:1 to 2.4:1. |
| A-weighting |
A frequency-response
adjustment of a sound-level meter that makes its reading conform,
very roughly, to human response. Attenuates the lower and very high
frequency ranges. |
| Baffle |
Any barrier to a sound sources. The surface upon which a loudspeaker
is mounted. |
| Bass |
Low-frequency sounds
of around 160 Hz and below. |
| Bipole Speakers |
One type of surround
speaker. In this instance two or more drivers are facing different
directions, and their cones vibrate in phase. |
| CD (Compact Disc) |
A 4.5-inch plastic disc
containing a digital audio recording that is played optically on a
laser-equipped player. Has a 16-bit quantization rate to produce audio
with high-fidelity sound. |
| CRT Projector |
A type of front projector.
It consists of three tubes each putting out one color: red, green,
and blue. |
| C-weighting |
A frequency-response
adjustment of a sound-level meter that measures wideband energy uniformly.
Attenuates very high frequency ranges. |
| Decibel |
A representation of ratio
between two any values. Annotated as dB. The deciBel ratio of A and
B = 20logA/B. deciBels are often used in audio since the human ear
responds logarithmically to sound pressure. dB
SPL (Sound Pressure Level) is the ratio of a sound pressure (in Pascal
units) compared to 20 µPA, the threshold of hearing. Dynamic range
is often quoted in dB and represents the ratio between the loudest
signal available (amplifier overload level) and the lowest (electrical
noise floor). |
| Diaphragm |
Any surface that vibrates
in response to sound or is vibrated to emit sound, such as in microphones
and loudspeakers. Also applied to wall and floor surfaces vibrating
in response to sound or in transmitting sound. |
| Diffuser |
A proprietary device
that diffuses impinging sounds (instead of reflecting them) through
reflection-phase-grating means. |
| Digital Light Processor (DLP) |
Used to control Digital
Micro-mirror Devices (DMD) in order to make an extremely
bright sharp pictures. |
| Digital Micro-mirror Device (DMD) |
A very small mirror (hence,
micro-mirror) that is turned on and off at various rates per second
to achieve different levels of brightness. Commonly used together
to form micro-mirror "wafers" that are controlled by a Digital
Light Processor (DLP). |
| Digital Theater Systems (DTS) |
An 8-channel sound format
used in commercial movie theaters. |
| Digital Versatile Disc (DVD) |
Previously known as Digital
Video Disc, this represents the latest in home theater. This format
is has the ability to have multiple aspect ratios, several different
versions of a movie with several different captions as well as Dolby
Digital sound. |
| Dipole Speakers |
A type of surround speaker
that has two or more drivers facing different directions (usually
180 degrees). |
| Dolby AC-3 |
Refers to the 5.1-channel
home theater sound system (also called Dolby Digital). Consists of
front left/right speakers, a center speaker, left/right surrounds,
and a subwoofer. |
| Dolby Digital |
A newer term for Dolby
AC-3. Consists of front left/right speakers, a center speaker, left/right
surrounds, and a subwoofer. |
| Dolby Digital Surround EX |
Dolby's latest surround
format. It is essentially Dolby Digital with an added center rear
channel. It premiered with Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. |
| Dolby Pro-Logic |
Most common surround
format. It consists of four channels of sound: left/right front channels,
a center channel, and one surround channel. |
| Dolby Surround |
The encoding process
used to make material compatible with Dolby Pro-Logic. |
| Driver |
Any sound-producing device. |
| Enclosure |
A box that holds a loudspeaker. |
| Equalizer |
A device for adjusting
the frequency response of a signal or system. |
| Fidelity |
As applied to sound quality,
the faithful representation of the original signal. |
| Foley |
The art of recreating
incidental sound effects, such as footsteps or rustling clothes, synchronized
with a moving picture. Named after one of its first practitioners. |
| Frequency |
The measure of the rapidity
of alterations of a periodic signal, expressed in cycles per second
or Hz. An alternating sound pressure of a specific frequency results
in an auditory sensation of pitch. |
| Frequency response |
The changes in the sensitivity
of a circuit or system with frequency. |
| Front Projector |
This is a separate unit
(projector) that projects the video image onto a separate movie screen. |
| Harmonic distortion |
Distortion of a signal
by adding content that is harmonically related to the original signal.
Clipping overload of an amplifier adds odd-order harmonics to the
signal. |
| Harmonics |
Integral multiples of
the fundamental frequency. The first harmonic is the fundamental,
and the second in twice the frequency of the fundamental, etc. |
| Hertz |
The unit of frequency, abbreviated Hz. The same as cycles per second.
Named after German physicist Heinrich Rudolph Hertz (1857-1894). |
| Impedance |
The opposition to the
flow of electricity or acoustic energy. In electronics is measured
in ohms. Named after German physicist Georg Simon Ohm (1789-1854). |
| Initial time-delay gap |
The time gap between
the arrival of the direct sound and the first sound reflected from
the surfaces of the room. |
| kHz |
1,000 Hz. |
| LCD Projector |
The smallest front projector
available today. One major benefit is that it is easy to set up. |
| LFD |
Low-frequency diffusion. |
| Light-Valve Projector |
A type of front projector.
It combines the technologies of LCD projectors and CRT projectors.
They offer exceptional detail and brightness. |
| Line Doubler/Tripler/Quadrupler |
Doubles, triples or quadruples
the number of lines that make up a picture, therefore increasing detail
by eliminating scan lines. |
| Linear |
A device or circuit with
a linear characteristics means that a signal passing through it is
not distorted. |
| Monopole Speakers |
A speaker with all drivers
facing one direction. Used for precise placement of sounds. Usually
used in front and center speakers. Also termed "front-firing". |
| Noise |
Interference of an electrical
or acoustical nature. Random noise is sometimes used as a test signal
in acoustical measurements. Pink noise is random noise whose spectrum
falls 3 dB per octave: it is useful for use with sound analyzers with
constant percentage bandwidths. |
| NTSC |
The standard by which
TV is broadcast in the |
| Null |
A low or minimum point
on a graph. A minimum pressure region in a room. |
| Octave |
The interval between
two frequencies having a ratio of 2:1. |
| Out of phase |
Two related alternating
signals with opposing polarity. |
| PAL |
The standard by which
TV is broadcast in |
| Pink noise |
A noise signal whose
spectrum level decreases at a 3-dB-per-octave rate. This gives the
noise equal energy per octave. |
| Rear Projector |
Another name for a "big
screen TV". |
| Receiver |
The heart and brain of
many home theaters. It has a decoder, audio/video switcher, AM/FM
tuner, and an amplifier. |
| Reference level |
The standardized level
at which a signal is measured for calibration purposes. In Home Theatres
and cinemas the reference level is 85dB SPL, when the electrical signal
is at a level 20dB below the clip point of the medium (and all the
meters in the studio read 0). Note that a sound pressure level in
dB means that it is calculated with respect to the standard reference
level of 20 µPa. |
| Reflection |
For surfaces large compared
to the wavelength of impinging sound, sound is reflected much as light
is reflected, with the angle of incidence equaling the angle of reflection. |
| Reverberation |
The tailing off of sound
in an enclosed area after multiple reflections from the boundaries. |
| Room Mode |
An acoustic wave room
resonance. Axial modes are associated with pairs of parallel walls.
Tangential modes involve four room surfaces and oblique modes all
six surfaces. Their effect is greatest in the range of 25Hz to 150HZ
in typical residential rooms. |
| Screen |
The material and frame
the picture is projected onto using a front projector. |
| Sine wave |
A periodic wave related
to simply harmonic motion. |
| Sound pressure level |
A sound pressure expression
in dB above the sound pressure of 20 microPascals (µPA). Named after
French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher Blaise Pascal (1623-1662). |
| Standing wave |
A response condition
in an enclosed space in which sound waves traveling in one direction
interact with reflected waves traveling in the opposite direction,
resulting in a condition of resonance, with peaks and nulls along
the length of the travel path. A synonym of Room Modes. |
| Subwoofer |
This is a separate speaker
used to handle the bass of movie soundtracks. |
| Surround Sound |
The popular term used
to describe an experience where the sound envelops the listener. This
is done using surround-encoded material, a receiver, and surround
speakers. |
| Surround Speaker |
This type of speaker
diffuses the sound so as to make it harder to discern where the sound
is coming from. |
| Threshold of hearing |
The lowest level sound
that can be perceived by the human auditory system. This is close
to the standard reference level of sound pressure, 20 µPA. |
| THX |
A trademark licensed
to movie theaters and manufacturers of home theater products, identifying
compliance with the performance parameters of Lucas film Ltd. for
commercial and home theater sound systems. Unlike Dolby, which focuses
on soundtrack formats, THX develops standards
for the playback environment, including theater and room acoustics. |
| Transducer |
A device for changing
electrical signals to acoustical or vice versa, such as a microphone
or loudspeaker. |
| Tube Traps |
Proprietary low frequency
sound-absorbing units. |
| Wavelength |
The distance a sound
wave travels in the time it takes to complete one cycle of alternation. |
| Weighting |
Adjustment of signal
frequency response to achieve a desired measurement. Often used in
sound-level meters to match the human ears response to sounds. |
| White noise |
Random noise having uniform amplitude at all frequencies. |