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		<title>Target AudioSpotlight Wallspace</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 2009 11:01:35 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Remy Martin Audio Spotlight Integration</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Nov 2009 14:10:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>A&amp;E TV Station Audio Spotlight WallScape</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 16 May 2009 10:44:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Fundamental Limitations of Loudspeaker Directivity</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2009 16:09:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Fundamental Limitations of Loudspeaker Directivity The advent of the Holosonic® technique for creating tight, narrow beams of audible sound using ultrasound has opened many new applications for sound control. Due to its success, various manufacturers have begun promoting traditional loudspeaker products as &#8220;highly directional&#8221; or &#8220;tightly focused&#8221;. These typically take the form of large loudspeaker [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Fundamental Limitations of Loudspeaker Directivity</strong></p>
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<td width="160" valign="top"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/x.gif" alt="" width="100" height="5" /><br />
<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/p_as16b_sm.jpg" border="1" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></td>
<td valign="top">The advent of the Holosonic<sup>®</sup> technique for  creating tight, narrow beams of audible sound using ultrasound has  opened many new applications for sound control.  Due to its success,  various manufacturers have begun promoting traditional loudspeaker  products as &#8220;highly directional&#8221; or &#8220;tightly focused&#8221;.   These typically  take the form of large loudspeaker panels, arrays, or domes, sometimes  adding phasing or other manipulations.</p>
<p>The directivity of all traditional loudspeaker devices  is fundamentally limited by nothing more than the size of the source  compared to the wavelengths it is generating.  A large loudspeaker will  be more directive than a small loudspeaker, or a loudspeaker specified  at higher frequency (smaller wavelength) will also have more  directivity.  No amount of phasing, shading, focusing, or other method  can overcome this fundamental limit; in fact, any of these methods will  always reduce directivity.</td>
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<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
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<td valign="top">The Audio Spotlight product line bypasses this  fundamental limitation by using nonlinear acoustic techniques to create  sound literally in mid-air using the nonlinear action of ultrasound.   This permits far greater directivity than any other loudspeaker in the  world, with remarkable directivity and isolation abilities.</p>
<p>While the analysis in this paper  should be well known to most people with a background in acoustics or  general wave mechanics, it is designed to alleviate much of the  confusion arising from exaggerated claims made by some manufacturers.  A  basic mathematical proof is provided, as well as simulations of a  best-case ideal loudspeaker device.</p>
<p><strong>Basis  of Loudspeaker Directivity</strong></p>
<p>The maximum directivity (&#8216;narrowness&#8217;) of any traditional loudspeaker ultimately  depends <em>only</em> on its physical size  relative to the wavelengths it&#8217;s producing.   No  amount of phasing, focusing, or other manipulation can alter this  inherent  physical limitation.</p>
<p>To make any loudspeaker more directional,  one can only make the  loudspeaker physically larger, either by creating  a large active surface, or, as an equivalent, by  using a large number  of small speakers, driven in aggregate to form a large radiating  surface.</td>
<td width="20"></td>
<td width="230" valign="top"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/directivity.gif" alt="" width="204" height="180" /></p>
<p><em><strong>Figure 1</strong>: Comparison between  the maximum possible directivity of a 16&#8243; loudspeaker and the real  measurements from a standard 16&#8243; Audio Spotlight speaker.  Contours are  shown for -20dB (90%) isolation.</em></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><strong>Mathematical  Proof:</strong></p>
<p>Consider a one-dimensional source transmitting an arbitrary distribution  of waves s(x)e, where s(x)  describes  the distribution of sound energy, and may be complex to include phase.   Note that, due to Huygen&#8217;s principle, this  function can perfectly  describe not only flat sources, but also curved  surfaces, or any wave  exiting an aperture, such as an opening of a reflective  dome.  Because  the directivity of each  axis is independent, the same analysis applies  for a 2D source [1].</p>
<p>It is well known that the angular response of any wave  source is equal  to the scaled Fourier transform of the source driving  function [2].  That is:</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-46" title="tech_d03" src="http://subliminalmediasolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/tech_d03.gif" alt="" width="208" height="32" /></p>
<p>where <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d04.gif" alt="" width="55" height="16" align="absbottom" /> and <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d05.gif" alt="" width="68" height="14" align="absbottom" />.</p>
<p>A loudspeaker of perfect directivity will have an impulse  as its angular  response, which is unity at zero angle and zero  elsewhere. The source required to achieve this response  is the inverse  Fourier transform of an impulse – or a uniform constant. This  corresponds to an infinitely large speaker  array, driven uniformly,  known as an infinite planar array (or in one  dimension, an infinite  line array).</p>
<p>As we are concerned with sources of finite size, the source function can  be written as the product of a window function<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d06.gif" alt="" width="36" height="14" align="absbottom" />, and some arbitrary source distribution <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d07.gif" alt="" width="32" height="14" align="absbottom" />, which could correspond to phasing, focusing, or array  shading.</p>
<p><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d08.gif" alt="" width="107" height="21" /></p>
<ul>where<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d09.gif" alt="" width="156" height="17" align="absbottom" />, or 0 otherwise. The  window<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d06.gif" alt="" width="36" height="14" align="absbottom" />is merely a function that expresses the total length of the  loudspeaker as <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d10.gif" alt="" width="15" height="13" align="absbottom" />.</ul>
<p>The angular response of this window response is the  well known sinc function:</p>
<p><strong><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d11.gif" alt="" width="140" height="21" /></strong></p>
<p>The window, and its angular response, is plotted in the  following figure:</p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="100%" align="center">
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<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d12.gif" alt="" width="230" height="200" /></td>
<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d13.gif" alt="" width="235" height="190" /></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><em><strong>Figure 2</strong>: The window function, and  its directional response.  The response horizontal axis is scaled by   wavelength.  The window response shown is  the basis for any speaker  directivity of any size or wavelength.</em></p>
<p>The response plot is shown scaled by wavelength for clarity. Note  that with appropriate scaling of the horizontal axis, this plot can be  used to describe the directivity of any uniform source, or the maximum  directivity of a source of a given size. The parameter <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d14.gif" alt="" width="36" height="13" align="absbottom" />is  the ratio of the size of the source compared to wavelength  of emitted  sound, and dictates the &#8220;narrowness&#8221; of the resulting directional   pattern.  Also note the additional sidelobes  which broadcast undesired  energy in off-axis directions, reducing field control.</p>
<p><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_dsinc.gif" alt="" width="410" height="260" /></p>
<p><em><strong>Figure 3</strong>: The angular response for  all uniform loudspeaker sources, which also shows their theoretical  maximum directivity, is shown.  The x-axis is scaled according to  speaker size and wavelength.</em></p>
<p>Figure 3 illustrates the directivity of every uniform acoustic  source, which is also the maximum directivity of any acoustic source of a  given size <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d10.gif" alt="" width="15" height="13" align="absbottom" />.  The horizontal axis shows the sine of angle (<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d05.gif" alt="" width="68" height="14" align="absbottom" />) scaled by speaker size and wavelength.  To interpret the graph, calculate the &#8220;real&#8221; range of angles of interest (<img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d18.gif" alt="" width="13" height="13" align="absbottom" /> = -90 to 90 degrees) which corresponds to the x-coordinates on the graph as ± <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d14.gif" alt="" width="36" height="13" align="absbottom" />. For example, a 24&#8243; (61cm) speaker at 1kHz has <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d10.gif" alt="" width="15" height="13" align="absbottom" />=0.61m and <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d28.gif" alt="" width="15" height="13" align="absbottom" />=0.34m, so <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d14.gif" alt="" width="36" height="13" align="absbottom" /> = 1.8.  The interval -1.8 to 1.8 corresponds to -90 degrees to 90  degrees, as shown.  This predicts one large main lobe, with a single  sidelobe.  This is plotted in a more conventional polar plot (with real  physical angle) in Figure 4a.  Note that the directional pattern is  exactly the same for every speaker with the same <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d14.gif" alt="" width="36" height="13" align="absbottom" /> ratio, such as an 12&#8243; (30cm) speaker at 2kHz, or a 48&#8243; speaker at 500Hz.</p>
<p>For a 36&#8243; (91 cm) speaker at 2kHz, <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d14.gif" alt="" width="36" height="13" align="absbottom" /> is 5.3, so the range -90 degrees to 90 degrees corresponds to the x  axis range of -5.3 to 5.3, as shown.  In this case, the main lobe has  narrowed considerably, and the presence of numerous sidelobes has  appeared. This graph can be used to predict the maximum theoretical  directivity of any loudspeaker, for any desired size and frequency.</p>
<p>In the Fourier domain, the multiplication operation is  replaced by  convolution, so the expression describing directivity of  the source is:</p>
<p><strong><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d15.gif" alt="" width="132" height="21" /></strong></p>
<p>The resulting directivity of the source is therefore the  result of  convolving the (arbitrary) source function with the (fixed)  window function.</p>
<p>The very same Fourier equation is found in signal  processing,  particularly in windowing and filter design.   A wide  variety of windows <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d16.gif" alt="" width="27" height="14" align="absbottom" />have  been developed, each allowing tradeoffs between main  lobe width and  sidelobe levels. For specifically minimizing the width of the  main  lobe, no window function can improve on the rectangular window [3].</p>
<p><strong>Therefore, for maximizing  directivity, a simple,  unphased, uniform source is the optimal  configuration.  Shading and/or  phasing  the source function can reduce sidelobe levels, but it is <em>always</em> at the expense of reducing main lobe directivity.</strong></p>
<p><strong>1D  Example: Sound bars</strong></p>
<p>Some manufacturers market “sound bars”, which are  traditional  loudspeakers in an array physically large in one dimension,  but narrow in  another, and claim that these sound fields are “highly  focused” or  “directional”. Compared to a small  speaker, these do have  slightly higher directivity because of their size – but in  practical  terms the directivity is still quite weak, and even then only exists <em>in the direction of the long axis.</em> Manufacturers of such devices generally (and  understandably) do not  publish directivity specifications, but an analysis of  the ideal  loudspeaker shows that the theoretical upper limit of directivity is   still extremely weak compared to the Audio Spotlight.</p>
<p>From the analysis above, the maximum possible  directivity of a sound bar of length <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d10.gif" alt="" width="15" height="13" align="absbottom" /> is</p>
<p><strong><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d17.gif" alt="" width="140" height="21" /></strong></p>
<p>Mapping this to real angle <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d18.gif" alt="" width="13" height="13" align="absbottom" />,</p>
<p><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d19.gif" alt="" width="176" height="48" /> [4]</p>
<p>The key parameter determining directivity is, once again,  the ratio of  the size of the speaker relative to its wavelength.  Note  that these arrays have only one long  axis – because the vertical axis  tends to be very small, sound is almost  perfectly omnidirectional, and  directivity is essentially nonexistent.</p>
<p>Example: 24” sound bar, 3” high, 1kHz frequency</p>
<p><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d20.jpg" alt="" width="280" height="65" /></p>
<ul><strong>Horizontal field width:</strong></p>
<li>29 degrees (-3dB, or  30% reduction in level)</li>
<li>&gt;180 degrees  (-20dB, 90% reduction in level)</li>
<li><em>Note that sound levels are never reduced by 90% or  more, regardless of  angle.  Also note the large &#8220;side lobes&#8221;  present  in the response.</em></li>
</ul>
<ul><strong>Vertical field width:<br />
</strong></p>
<li>Almost perfectly  omnidirectional.  No directivity at all  is expected; sound will propagate evenly along the vertical axis.</li>
</ul>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="100%" align="center">
<tbody>
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<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d22.gif" alt="" width="270" height="270" /></td>
<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d21.gif" alt="" width="270" height="270" /></td>
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</tbody>
</table>
<p><em><strong>Figures 4a and 4b</strong>: Maximum possible  directivity from  a 24&#8243; sound bar, at 1kHz.  Note  limited directivity  for the horizontal axis (left), and the complete absence of  directivity  on the vertical axis (right). </em></p>
<p><strong>2D  Example:  Speaker Panels</strong></p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="300" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td align="center" valign="top"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_2dspeakerpanel1.jpg" alt="" width="100" height="100" /></td>
<td width="180" align="center" valign="top"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_2dspeakerpanel.jpg" alt="" width="88" height="100" /></td>
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</tbody>
</table>
<p>Speaker panels, whether they are made from a single  radiating element or  an array of small loudspeakers, are simply the 2D  form of the Speaker Bar  mentioned above, and will all have the same  maximum directivity.  In this case, the horizontal and vertical   dimensions are equal.  Therefore, the  sound field pattern is identical  to that of the Sound Bar’s largest dimension,  but for both horizontal  and vertical angles.</p>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="100%" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d23.gif" alt="" width="270" height="270" /></td>
<td width="50%" align="center"><img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_d24.gif" alt="" width="270" height="270" /></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p><em><strong>Figures 5a and 5b</strong>: Maximum possible  directivity for  a 24&#8243; speaker panel, at 1kHz, which is identical for  both horizontal and  vertical axes. </em></p>
<p><strong>Full  Field Plots</strong></p>
<p>The graphs above show the directivity in the so-called <em>far field</em>, where the listener is distant  from the source, as is the convention in acoustic specifications.  The <em>near field</em> is also straightforward to analyze via simulation, as closed-form mathematical solutions do not exist.</p>
<p>The simulations below were performed for a perfect,  uniform acoustic  source, which creates maximum possible directivity.  The plot scales are meters  and dB, and for visualization, both the  source size (black rectangle) and the  wavelength (grey rectangle) are  shown to the left of the graph.   The -3dB and -12dB beam angles (when  they exist) are shown with dotted  and dashed lines, respectively.</p>
<p><strong>Fixed  Source Size, Varying Wavelength</strong></p>
<p>The first set of simulations is of a fixed source size  (0.4m/16&#8243;), with  varying wavelength.  From the results  above, we  expect to see an omnidirectional response for a large wavelength   relative to source, and higher directivity as wavelength decreases.</p>
<p><a> <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_dthumb1.gif" border="1" alt="" /> </a></p>
<p><em><strong>Figure 6</strong>:   Ideal sound fields  from a 16&#8243;/0.4m source, with varying  wavelength.  Directivity is weak  for  wavelengths similar to source size, but increases for very small  wavelengths (high  frequencies). </em></p>
<p>This is precisely what is observed; for wavelengths much  larger than the  source, the sound field is omnidirectional.   Modest  directivity is shown for wavelengths similar to the source size,  and as  the wavelength decreases to a small fraction of the source size, the   loudspeaker is always naturally directional.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Fixed  Wavelength, Varying Source Size</strong></p>
<p>For an alternate perspective, simulations were done at a  fixed  wavelength, while varying source size.   As it is where the ear  is most sensitive and most real-life content is  centered, 1kHz is used  for analysis, and has a wavelength of 0.35m.  One would expect  loudspeakers much smaller  than this to have an omnidirectional  response, while loudspeakers much larger  than 0.35m (14”) would be more  directional.</p>
<p><a> <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_dthumb1.gif" border="1" alt="" /> </a></p>
<p><em><strong>Figure 7</strong>:  The wavelength is fixed  at  0.4m (1kHz) while the source size is varied.   A source smaller  than or comparable to the wavelength is mostly  omnidirectional, while a  large source becomes more directive.</em></p>
<p>For a small source ¼ of the wavelength, the sound field  is again  omnidirectional.  As the source size  increases, directivity  increases as expected, though the coverage area also grows  substantially.   But notable directivity exists only when the size  source is much larger  than the wavelength.</p>
<p><strong>Phasing and Focusing</strong></p>
<p>Phased arrays have been used for decades to steer and/or  focus acoustic  energy, as well as other wave sources (such as radar).   The basic principle is to apply a suitable  delay (or phase offset) to  each small portion of the source, such that the sum  of contributions  from each portion of the array sum constructively along the  desired  direction (for a steered array), or at a particular point (for a   focused array).  As isolation is  typically the goal of directivity, the  focused case will be simulated. Phasing  a linear array is acoustically  equivalent to building a perfectly curved  loudspeaker array, or using a  perfect reflecting surface.</p>
<p>For this simulation, we will allow a very large  loudspeaker size of 1m  (39&#8243;), and a 1kHz tone.  Distance is analyzed  continuously from 0.5m to 2.5m.  A  small circle marks the focal point.</p>
<p><a> <img src="http://holosonics.com/images/tech_dthumb1.gif" border="1" alt="" /> </a></p>
<p><em><strong>Figure 8</strong>:  Sound fields from a 1m   source playing 1kHz, perfectly focused to distances ranging from 0.5m  to 2.5m.  Focus is apparent at short distances, but  has no clear effect  at distances longer than about 0.5m. </em></p>
<p>A reasonable degree of focus is noted for the 0.5m case,  but the sound fields for focal lengths beyond this are nearly identical  to the unfocused case.  This makes sense qualitatively; one cannot  expect to focus effectively at distances much further than the size of  the source array.</p>
<p>Note also that while focusing is effective for very short  distances, the  cost is directivity – outside the focal point, sound  expands far more than it would have with an unfocused array.    Therefore, as a practical matter, focusing arrays are not effective for   providing localized listening zones.</p>
<p><strong>Conclusions</strong></p>
<p>Loudspeaker sources of a variety of configurations are  used to  illustrate that even under ideal circumstances, directivity and  localization of  sound is extremely limited.  No degree of  phasing,  focusing, or other manipulation can improve these results, as they are   an inherent limitation of linear acoustics.</p>
<p>The Holosonic<sup>®</sup> technique for sound generation  in the Audio  Spotlight is a fundamentally different way of creating  sound, and is not  limited by the barriers facing traditional acoustics  illustrated above.  This is because the source of sound from an  Audio  Spotlight is not the physical loudspeaker panel – it is the volume of  air  in front of it.  This makes the actual  sound source far larger  than the physical loudspeaker seen – it just happens to  be invisible,  and made from ultrasound.  This  enables the Audio Spotlight to  fundamentally provide far more directivity and  isolation than any  loudspeaker can ever provide.</p>
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