-- Intensity of your comedown: Only a conjecture on my part, but I'm thinking
that it might be softened by carefully regulating a decreasing amount of the stuff
over time, rather than the cold-turkey approach. It's not likely that you would be
able to exercise effective control on your own, though.
-- Hearing sounds that aren't there: Why are you surprised, and what are you
complaining about ? You willfully and intentionally screwed with the operation of
your brain. That was the whole idea, that was the reason you did it, and that's
how this whole situation started. What made you think that the sensations
would only be the pleasant ones ? Instead of complaining, count yourself lucky
that you're still walking and breathing.
There are four elements of sound. These elements are pitch, timbre, duration and intensity. Timbre is the quality of sound, pitch is a tone from a number of vibrations per second, intensity is volume, and duration is length.
The pitch of a sound is also known as its frequency. [Have you heard of a pitch pipe used for establishing a note]Aside from loudness / intensity, the other important characteristic of a sound is its timbre, which considers the harmonics and resonance, and persistence of the sound.
From the Sounds Inside was created in 2000.
The unique souNd is caused by the reed and the material of which the clarinet is made. This is why a wooden clarinet sounds nicer and tends to resonate more than a plastic one and that is why all professional clarinetists use wooden not plastic clarinets.
Paper planes by M.I.A. ?
Decibels are a logarithmic unit used to measure sound intensity. As sound level increases, the decibel scale also increases to reflect the higher intensity. So, decibels do not decrease when sound level increases; they actually increase to show louder sounds.
decibels
- frequency of sounds - intensity of sounds - amplitude - sound pressure - wave number
This unit is W/m2.
The loudness of a sound is a reflection of its intensity, which is determined by the amplitude of the sound wave. Sounds with higher amplitudes are perceived as louder, while sounds with lower amplitudes are quieter.
Intensity of sound is affected. Intensity is the amount of sound energy passing in unit time. Higher intensity sounds can travel longer distances.
Sensorineural deafness
Small amplitude sounds are those that have low intensity and are not very loud. These sounds can be quiet or subtle, such as a whisper or rustling leaves. They are in contrast to high amplitude sounds, which are louder and more intense.
A loud sound has a high intensity and volume, while a soft sound has a low intensity and volume. Loud sounds are typically heard as being strong or forceful, while soft sounds are more gentle or subdued.
The intensity of a sound is measured in decibels (dB), with higher decibel levels indicating louder sounds. The intensity is a measure of the energy that a sound wave carries, and can impact how loud a sound appears to our ears.
Loudness is created by the amplitude or intensity of sound waves. The greater the amplitude, the louder the sound. This means that sounds with higher intensity will be perceived as louder by our ears.
Sounds grow fainter as you get further away from the sound source due to the dispersion of sound waves in the surrounding medium. As distance increases, the energy carried by the sound waves spreads out over a larger area, resulting in a decrease in sound intensity at the listener's location. This phenomenon is known as the inverse square law, where sound intensity decreases proportionally to the square of the distance from the source.