WO2024099733A1 - Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen korrektur des frequenzganges von schallwellenfronten - Google Patents
Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen korrektur des frequenzganges von schallwellenfronten Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2024099733A1 WO2024099733A1 PCT/EP2023/079178 EP2023079178W WO2024099733A1 WO 2024099733 A1 WO2024099733 A1 WO 2024099733A1 EP 2023079178 W EP2023079178 W EP 2023079178W WO 2024099733 A1 WO2024099733 A1 WO 2024099733A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- sound
- sound transducer
- transducers
- transducer arrangement
- audience area
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Ceased
Links
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04R—LOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
- H04R1/00—Details of transducers, loudspeakers or microphones
- H04R1/20—Arrangements for obtaining desired frequency or directional characteristics
- H04R1/32—Arrangements for obtaining desired frequency or directional characteristics for obtaining desired directional characteristic only
- H04R1/40—Arrangements for obtaining desired frequency or directional characteristics for obtaining desired directional characteristic only by combining a number of identical transducers
- H04R1/403—Arrangements for obtaining desired frequency or directional characteristics for obtaining desired directional characteristic only by combining a number of identical transducers loud-speakers
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04R—LOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
- H04R3/00—Circuits for transducers, loudspeakers or microphones
- H04R3/12—Circuits for transducers, loudspeakers or microphones for distributing signals to two or more loudspeakers
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04S—STEREOPHONIC SYSTEMS
- H04S7/00—Indicating arrangements; Control arrangements, e.g. balance control
- H04S7/30—Control circuits for electronic adaptation of the sound field
- H04S7/307—Frequency adjustment, e.g. tone control
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04R—LOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
- H04R2201/00—Details of transducers, loudspeakers or microphones covered by H04R1/00 but not provided for in any of its subgroups
- H04R2201/40—Details of arrangements for obtaining desired directional characteristic by combining a number of identical transducers covered by H04R1/40 but not provided for in any of its subgroups
- H04R2201/401—2D or 3D arrays of transducers
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04R—LOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
- H04R27/00—Public address systems
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04S—STEREOPHONIC SYSTEMS
- H04S2420/00—Techniques used stereophonic systems covered by H04S but not provided for in its groups
- H04S2420/13—Application of wave-field synthesis in stereophonic audio systems
Definitions
- the proposed solution relates to a method for direction-dependent correction of the frequency response of sound wave fronts that are generated in two-dimensional sound transducer arrangements according to the principle of wave field synthesis or using beamforming methods.
- a vector-based method adapts the shape and level of each of the wave fronts generated from a large number of elementary waves to the audience area in such a way that even under unfavorable acoustic conditions hardly any unwanted reflections from the playback room are stimulated.
- the signal levels are adjusted by the described method in such a way that a very balanced sound pressure level is achieved in the entire audience area, even if its shape is irregular and the distances of the listeners from the sound transducer surface vary greatly.
- the delay times and levels are calculated separately for each of the sound transducers in the sound transducer arrangement and each individual wave front.
- a mathematical method for calculating the delay times is described, for example, in DE 102021207302 A1.
- each sound transducer in the sound transducer arrangement is assigned coordinates in the audience area.
- a vector calculation of the distances between the sound transducer and the assigned point in the audience area leads, with appropriate correction of the level, to a very uniform sound pressure distribution in the audience area for each of the input signals.
- wave field synthesis A.J.Berkhout, A Holographic Approach to Acoustic Control, J.Audio Eng.Soc, Vol.36, No.12, 1988
- a large number of sound transducers generate a wave front that fills a given audience area with very supplied at a uniform level in high audio quality, without undesirably illuminating adjacent reflection surfaces too strongly.
- the demands on the sound systems increase.
- loudspeaker arrangements made up of several individual sound sources direct the sound more strongly into the more distant audience areas.
- a typical application is so-called line arrays, which are arranged, for example, to the left and right above a stage front. Their curvature is adjusted to the audience area in such a way that the radiated wave front in the elevation plane is directed towards the more distant audience areas. This creates almost a cylindrical wave around this part of the loudspeaker arrangement.
- the surface of a cylinder grows linearly with its radius, which is why the sound pressure decreases by 3 decibels every time the distance is doubled.
- the stronger curvature of the transducer surfaces results in a larger vertical opening angle.
- the wave front in this area is almost a section of a sphere.
- the surface of a sphere which grows quadratically with the radius, results in a sound pressure drop of 6 dB for every doubling of the distance.
- the rapid sound pressure drop in the near area and the more far-reaching cylindrical wave for the more distant seats significantly reduce the differences in sound pressure between the front and rear audience areas.
- sound arrays with electronic control of the individual transducers have also been used.
- Each transducer has its own amplifier, which is controlled by a signal processor.
- Mathematical processes allow radiation to be adapted much better to the audience area than would be possible with the mechanical alignment of individual transducers.
- the curvature of the transducer arrangement can be adjusted according to Huygens' principle with minimal delays in the control of the individual Transducers can be simulated and adjusted electronically.
- these options are limited to the elevation plane with the available sound lines. Because the directional characteristics can only be adjusted in the elevation plane even with this improved radiation, the sound field is only roughly tailored to the given audience area. In the azimuth plane, the radiation is only given by the mechanical alignment of the loudspeaker group.
- the audience area can only be adjusted here by selecting loudspeaker elements with wider or narrower horizontal directional characteristics.
- Loudspeaker fields such as those available for audio reproduction based on the principle of wave field synthesis (such as in WO 2015/036845 A1) are significantly more flexible.
- each sound transducer is operated by a separate power amplifier.
- the superposition of the elementary waves of each individual sound transducer creates a wave front that reconstructs a spherical section of the wave front of a real sound source.
- the center of this spherical section is the virtual sound source of the wave field synthesis.
- the boundaries of the spherical section are determined by the size of the sound transducer field in conjunction with the position of the virtual sound source.
- the individual sound transducers of the at least one sound transducer arrangement emit elementary waves during operation, which overlap to form a common wave front.
- the acoustic center of the sound transducers is meant.
- the at least one sound transducer arrangement and the audience area are assigned to a common coordinate system, in particular a Cartesian coordinate system.
- the coordinate system on the side of the at least one sound transducer arrangement serves in particular to provide starting points for position vectors ⁇ ⁇ which together with direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ determine the radiation of the sound from the at least one sound transducer arrangement.
- the coordinate system thus links the at least one sound transducer arrangement and the at least one audience area.
- the acoustic centers of the transducers are located at the origin of the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ . It is also possible that the transducers are not exactly at the origin of the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ If the positions of the acoustic centers of the sound transducers deviate from the crossing points of the auxiliary grid, the associated change in delay time and level can be corrected by spatial interpolation or other methods.
- the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ can be stored in the form of a list, for example.
- points in the audience area and points on the at least one sound transducer arrangement - and thus indirectly also the sound transducers themselves - can be easily geometrically related to one another, such as when calculating the distance of a sound transducer to a point in the audience area.
- the method is based on an assignment of points in the coordinate system to points in at least one audience area and assigns a position vector ⁇ ⁇ to.
- the position vector ⁇ ⁇ thus points to a specific location in the audience area 3.
- the delay times ⁇ ⁇ of the transducers are chosen so that the local direction of the common wave front corresponds to the direction of the direction vector, in particular the normalized direction vector ⁇ ⁇ ⁇
- the transducers of the at least one transducer arrangement are thus each provided with a specific delay time ⁇ ⁇ operated.
- the delay time ⁇ ⁇ of a sound transducer determines the time of generation of an elementary wave at the respective sound transducer.
- the delay times ⁇ ⁇ of the individual transducers compared to the input signal.
- each transducer is assigned an individual delay time ⁇ ⁇
- the delay times of the individual transducers can differ fundamentally, but some transducers can also be assigned the same delay time ⁇ ⁇
- the total of the delay times with which the individual transducers of the transducer arrangement are operated influences the shape of the common wave front, which is composed of the elementary waves generated by the individual transducers.
- the total of the delay times ⁇ ⁇ the shape of the common wave front can be determined.
- by choosing the delay times ⁇ ⁇ produce complex wave fronts. The result is different delay times ⁇ ⁇ in the sound transducer arrangement a correspondingly shaped wave front, e.g. with different curvatures.
- the wave front formed by the elementary waves is no longer a spherical section, as is generated by a virtual sound source with a two-dimensional wave field synthesis sound transducer arrangement.
- the supply area i.e. of at least one audience area
- the convex curvature of the wave front is usually smaller, a stronger curvature in the direction of the front audience seats causes the sound pressure level to drop more quickly with distance and distributes the energy over a larger audience area.
- the delay times ⁇ ⁇ of the individual transducers can be determined in such a way that the common wave front adapts to the geometry of the audience area.
- the delay times ⁇ ⁇ the local directions of the wave front are controlled.
- the resulting irregularly shaped wave front is assigned the same number of grid points (i.e. the coordinate system in the area of the transducer arrangement) of the transducer arrangement for the same size of the audience area and thus also of sound transducers.
- such a wave front differs fundamentally from the spherical section of a point-shaped virtual sound source of wave field synthesis, in which the audience area supplied by the same number of sound transducers increases steadily with distance.
- the local direction of the common wave front at a position on the wave front describes the direction in which the common wave front propagates at the respective position.
- the local direction of the common wave front can be described by the direction vector that is perpendicular to the respective point on the common wave front.
- the direction vector describes a local direction of propagation of the common wave front if the wave front moves perpendicular to the direction vector.
- Adaptation of the common wave front to the geometry of at least one audience area is made possible by a definable assignment that assigns the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ (which can be assigned to individual surge transducers, for example) each have a position in the audience area corresponding to a position vector ⁇ ⁇
- the delay times ⁇ ⁇ are then chosen so that the local direction of the common wave front at the position in the audience area, which is determined by the position vector ⁇ ⁇ is described, the direction of the direction vector ⁇ ⁇ ⁇
- local propagation directions of the common wave front are given by the normalized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ given.
- the sound transducers of the at least one sound transducer arrangement can be arranged on or in a plane.
- the sound transducers of the sound transducer arrangement can be arranged on or in an at least partially curved surface.
- the arrangement can be, for example, grid-like.
- the distances between the sound transducers can be uniform.
- the distances in a first direction, in particular in the vertical direction, and/or the distances in a second direction, in particular in the horizontal direction can each correspond or result in a regular sequence of distance sizes.
- the geometric shape in or on which the sound transducers are arranged can be complex.
- the sound transducers can be arranged in a plane in an area.
- the sound transducers of the at least one sound transducer arrangement are arranged in a three-dimensional area, in particular a room.
- the arrangement of the individual sound transducers can be determined starting from a reference surface, for example a plane or a curved surface, with at least a subset of the sound transducers of the at least one sound transducer arrangement being arranged on the reference surface and the positions of the remaining sound transducers of the at least one sound transducer arrangement being able to be determined by a spatial offset in the three-dimensional area.
- the operation of the sound transducer - which corresponds to the position vector ⁇ ⁇ is assigned - with delay time ⁇ ⁇ can be carried out by a control using a computer system.
- the control can be carried out with a delay time ⁇ ⁇ be influenced digitally or be caused by digital control.
- the delay times can be in the order of milliseconds.
- the time difference is usually only a few microseconds, so that the overall system requires a very stable system clock.
- the delay time with which a sound transducer is operated can be influenced mechanically or geometrically.
- the delay time of a sound transducer can be controlled by means of a spatial offset, particularly in the radiation direction of the sound transducer arrangement, compared to other sound transducers in the sound transducer arrangement.
- the audience area can have at least partially a flat or concave and / or at least partially a convex shape.
- the audience area can be described as a connected area or as a non-connected area consisting of at least two connected parts.
- An example of an audience area made up of several areas is the large hall of the skillse, Berlin or an opera hall with several tiers.
- the audience area can also be represented by a set of coordinate points. In the coordinate system, the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ , which are assigned to the transducers of the transducer arrangement, form a regular grid.
- the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ a regular grid on the reference area ⁇ assigned to the audience area.
- the assignment, which is assigned to each position vector ⁇ ⁇ in the transducer array a point in the audience area corresponding to the position vector ⁇ ⁇ can be determined by means of connecting lines from the transducer arrangement to the audience area.
- the connecting line can be a half-line starting from the position vector ⁇ ⁇ which intersects the audience area or the reference area ⁇ assigned to the audience area.
- the sound transducer can then be assigned a position vector ⁇ ⁇ which results from the intersection of the half-line with the audience area or the reference area ⁇ assigned to the audience area.
- ⁇ ⁇ the normal to the reference surface ⁇ at the position vector ⁇ ⁇
- the proposed solution also includes a method for determining delay times ⁇ ⁇ for a transducer arrangement with a plurality of transducers ⁇ for generating elementary waves according to the delay times ⁇ ⁇ for providing sound to at least one audience area.
- the method comprises the steps of determining a coordinate system by which the at least one sound transducer arrangement is approximately described as a reference surface ⁇ and the audience area is approximately described as a reference surface ⁇ ; determining position vectors ⁇ on the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement, from which the positions of the Sound transducer of at least one sound transducer arrangement can be determined; the determination of standardized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ starting from the position vectors ⁇ , where the normalized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ directed to the reference area ⁇ of the audience area and the determination of delay times ⁇ ⁇ for transducers ⁇ , so that the elementary waves of the transducers of the transducer arrangement during operation according to the delay times ⁇ ⁇ superimpose to form a common wavefront, where
- the common wave front propagates essentially perpendicular to the normalized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇
- the normalized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ the propagation path of the common wave front.
- the common wave front is determined by a suitable choice of the normalized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ can be adapted to the geometry of the audience area.
- the relative gain factors ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ for at least a subset of the position vectors ⁇ according to the rule ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ where ⁇ is a normal to the reference surface ⁇ of the transducer arrangement at the point determined by the position vector ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ the normalized direction vector starting from the position vector ⁇ .
- the position vectors ⁇ can correspond to the positions of the sound transducers on the sound transducer arrangement in whole or in part, in any case there is a difference between the physical positions of the individual sound transducers in the at least one sound transducer arrangement and the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ to determine coordinates in the area of at least one sound transducer arrangement, a spatial assignment.
- the number of position vectors ⁇ can correspond to the number of sound transducers in the sound transducer arrangement or can also be different from this. In particular, the number of position vectors ⁇ can be higher than the number of sound transducers on the sound transducer arrangement.
- the position vectors ⁇ can describe intersection points of an auxiliary grid described on the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement.
- position vectors ⁇ do not have to be located on all intersection points of the auxiliary grid.
- the auxiliary grid can, for example, describe a rectangular plane.
- the number of grid lines in the horizontal and/or vertical direction can each correspond to a number of rows and/or columns of sound transducers in the sound transducer arrangement.
- the number of grid lines in the horizontal and/or vertical direction can also be greater than a number of rows and/or columns of sound transducers in the sound transducer arrangement.
- the method can also include determining position vectors ⁇ on the reference surface ⁇ of the audience area, with a position vector ⁇ being assigned to a position vector ⁇ .
- the assignment can be made by means of a connecting line from the position vector ⁇ to the position vector ⁇ , on the basis of which the standardized direction vector ⁇ is determined. ⁇ can be determined.
- the entirety of the connecting lines is designed in such a way that they do not cross or overlap in pairs.
- no connecting line intersects the other connecting lines.
- the assignment of the position vectors ⁇ to the position vectors ⁇ can be done automatically, in particular using a 3D CAD file of the audience area. This can be done using a suitable mapping process.
- points and/or areas of the reference surface of the audience area can be left out during the assignment, for example those that correspond to areas of the audience area that should not be hit by the common wave front.
- the position vectors ⁇ can be evenly distributed on the reference surface ⁇ of the audience area. This means that they can correspond to evenly distributed points in the audience area. An even distribution of the points is ensured, for example, by ensuring that two adjacent points are the same distance from each other.
- the reference surface ⁇ of the audience area can be described by an auxiliary grid.
- the position vectors ⁇ can at least partially correspond to intersection points of the auxiliary grid.
- the reference surface ⁇ of the sound transducer arrangement can be described by an auxiliary grid on which the position vectors ⁇ at least partially correspond to intersection points.
- auxiliary grid is particularly important for numerical treatment, since numerical integrations can be easily carried out in it using the trapezoid rule, for example.
- Auxiliary grids on the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement and auxiliary grids on the reference surface ⁇ of the audience area can be converted into one another. In particular, they can have the same number of lines in the horizontal and/or vertical plane. By connecting the intersection points of the auxiliary grids, a suitable connection can be made between the reference plane ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement and the reference plane ⁇ of the audience area.
- the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement can be a plane or, for example, an at least partially curved surface.
- a curvature of the reference surface ⁇ of the sound transducer arrangement in the horizontal direction can differ from a curvature in the vertical direction.
- the delay times ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) are in one embodiment by means of numerical integration of the discrete 2D vector field [ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ]
- the delay differences ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ in ⁇ - direction or ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ in ⁇ - direction given by or where ⁇ and ⁇ describe discrete step sizes in ⁇ - direction and ⁇ - direction respectively, ⁇ describes the speed of sound and where ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ by the scalar products ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇
- the tangent vectors ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ are given by the partial derivatives or .
- it can be used in a method for determining the delay times ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) first the two-dimensional discrete vector field [ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ] in accordance with the regulations or based on tangent vectors ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ the reference surface ⁇ of the transducer arrangement, the standardized direction vectors ⁇ ⁇ and the speed of sound ⁇ .
- the vector field can then be integrated using a numerical integration method.
- the function ⁇ obtained by integration ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) then describes the desired delay times.
- the values of the function ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) describe the delay times at the position vectors ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ). For each individual combination of the parameters u and v, ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) an own position ⁇ ⁇ . The delays at the driver positions can then be determined by spatial interpolation. The calculated time is then multiplied by the time of the closest sample specified by the sampling frequency of the overall system.
- the desired delay times are described by a function ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) , whose gradient is the two-dimensional vector field [ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ] , where the components ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ as given above.
- a wavefront can be viewed as a type of relief that assigns a height at that point to each intersection point of the grid.
- the gradient at that point is then a vector that points in the direction of the greatest increase in height.
- the magnitude of this vector indicates the greatest gradient at that point.
- the speed of sound ⁇ can depend on the location, for example if there is a higher temperature in a higher area of the sound propagation range, which influences the speed of sound.
- the speed of sound can also depend on the location, which is then taken into account in the calculation.
- the numerical integration method can include the composite trapezium method, the Simpson method, the Romberg method or the more advanced inverse gradient method.
- Embodiments are described below using figures as examples.
- Fig.1 an embodiment for operating a sound transducer arrangement
- Fig.2 a schematic representation of the method for direction-dependent correction of the frequency response
- Fig.3 a schematic representation of the wave front of a virtual sound source of wave field synthesis in a two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement
- Fig.4 a schematic representation of the wave front of a shape of the wave front of a two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement adapted to the audience area
- Fig.5 the determination of normal vectors on a curved reference surface of a sound transducer arrangement
- Fig.6 the assignment of the auxiliary grid of a sound transducer arrangement to an auxiliary grid in the audience area
- Fig.7 the formation of a local direction vector of the wave front, which is created from surrounding elementary waves starting from a sound transducer and shows the audience area
- Fig.8 the formation of a standardized direction vector of length one
- Fig.9 an embodiment in which the audience area is divided into individual sub-areas with different signal content
- Fig.1 an embodiment of the method from DE 102021207302 A1 is briefly shown as an example for explanation.
- the method is based on each sound transducer 9 in the sound transducer arrangement 1 being assigned a point in the audience area 3.
- the procedure is carried out separately for each sound transducer 9, each crossing point of a grid in the audience area 3 and each of the simultaneously reproduced input signals of the system.
- the mathematical method described in DE 102021207302 A1 thus provides the delay time ⁇ and the relative gain factors ⁇ for each of the input signals.
- ⁇ ⁇ for the respective sound transducer.
- the superposition of the elementary wave with the elementary waves of the neighboring sound transducers results in the respective desired local direction within the wave front.
- the local propagation directions combine to form a wave front, the shape of which can be irregularly shaped depending on the shape and structure of the audience area. This is the only way to achieve level constancy over a wide, irregularly shaped audience area.
- the individual input channels Ch 1...Ch n are processed in the same way with their associated data and the sum of all signals results in the contribution of the respective sound transducer to the wave fronts, which are emitted simultaneously in different directions and to different audience areas with independent signal content.
- the vector d for the local propagation direction of each wave front is also available, with which the distance is determined for each individual sound transducer. The system thus knows the path that the wave front in question has to travel from the sound transducer to the listener.
- the polar coordinates ⁇ and ⁇ (i.e. spatial / 3D polar coordinates or spherical coordinates), with which the local radiation direction of each individual wave front is determined, are also available from the calculations.
- the proposed solution describes how the spectral balance of the spatial radiation of the sound transducer arrangement 1 can be significantly improved.
- the proposed solution can always be applied if the local radiation direction is known for each of the emitted wave fronts, which results from the superposition of the elemental waves of the surrounding loudspeakers. This radiation direction is known in the method according to DE 102021207302 A1 from the direction of the vector d.
- Fig. 2 describes an embodiment of the proposed solution in the form of a method for correcting the direction-dependent frequency response of sound wave fronts generated by a two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement according to the principle of wave field synthesis or beamforming. The illustration is limited to an example of signal processing for a single sound transducer. A method shown in Fig.
- the signal lines of channels 1 ... n carry the system's input signals to all transducer units and to all modules. They can also be assigned to individual groups of transducers that are intended for the radiation of different frequency ranges. In this case, the corresponding frequency response drop in the crossover area is already implemented, the sum signal of all frequency ranges is already equalized to a linear frequency response of the entire system in its main radiation direction. After the delay with ⁇ and the level control with the relative gain factor dn for each individual transducer, each input channel is fed to a summation before the signal drives the loudspeaker.
- the extension of the system for correcting the direction-dependent frequency response is added before the signal delay in each input channel for the relevant transducer. It is not important in which order the subsequent corrections are carried out. Individual corrections can also be omitted or others added.
- the correction of the direction-dependent frequency response changes of the individual transducers is arranged first in the signal path. As with the other frequency response corrections, they should be compensated by a forward correction. To do this, the 3D polar coordinates of the respective sound transducers built into the module are determined and saved individually in a low-reflection room. In principle, it would also be possible to use the half-space radiation data provided by the manufacturer or the data from measurements in an infinite baffle.
- the measurement data is saved in angular steps in a spherical coordinate system with a radius of 1, so that the corresponding frequency response can be read out from the memory related to the sound transducer using the polar coordinates ⁇ and ⁇ , which determine the local radiation direction of each individual wave front.
- the data for the local direction of the wavefront known from [1] provide a frequency response curve from the relationship G(f, ⁇ , ⁇ ) which, in a subsequent inversive filter Ginv (f), determines the frequency response error of the relevant Sound transducer in the local radiation direction of the relevant wave front can be compensated for as far as possible.
- a compensation of acoustic obstacles in the signal path is shown.
- This can be a loudspeaker grille that has a low-pass function and forms standing waves to the baffle or a perforated projection surface that is used as a projection surface in front of the sound transducer modules.
- a perforated projection surface that is used as a projection surface in front of the sound transducer modules.
- the compensation is based on a forward correction of the sound transducers.
- the only difference is that for the measurement of the polar radiation of the sound transducers, the difference between the measurement of the individual sound transducers without the acoustic obstacle and the measurement of the polar radiation with the obstacle in front is used and saved.
- the further steps are analogous to the correction of the sound transducers, which are normalized in a subsequent element in an inversive filter with the function Hinv (f).
- the third correction element in the signal curve is used to compensate for the airborne sound insulation in the signal curve. Its influence on the frequency response depends on the relative humidity (in %), air pressure (in kPa) and temperature (in K) and increases with the distance of the sound transducer from the listener.
- the inverse filter then compensates for the airborne sound insulation of the relevant wave front in the direction of the audience area.
- the data In order to calculate the compensation filters for each of the three filter blocks, the data must be preprocessed. First, the data is normalized to change the overall gain in all directions by a fixed amount to achieve a desired level. Then the data is regularized, which involves frequency limiting and spatial and spectral smoothing of the data. The degree of smoothing depends on the required quality of compensation and the available filter resolution. Finally, the normalized and regularized frequency response data are inverted for the given angles ⁇ and ⁇ (or d in the third block), resulting in the final inverse filter.
- the maximum level of compensation can be limited by the control factors wG, wH and wA.
- a limit value can be entered in the overall system, for example for maximum compensation up to + 12dB.
- Narrowband frequency response dips below a third octave width such as those caused by direction-dependent zero points of the sound transducers, are subjectively hardly disturbing. The situation is different with the drop in the entire high-frequency range, which is clearly audible at great distances, especially in dry ambient air.
- the aim is to make maximum use of the available headroom.
- One way of increasing it for the far-away areas is already described in DE 102021207302 A1.
- a larger number of sound transducers are assigned to audience areas of the same size as the distance from the sound transducer arrangement increases.
- a very balanced level curve without significant sound coloration can be achieved over a wide, irregularly shaped audience area.
- the method described allows for further refinements.
- the direction-dependent frequency response change mentioned at the beginning can be used to accommodate certain preferences of individual audience groups or to correct hearing loss. individual people, or to expand the artistic possibilities as an additional correction element.
- the system can work independently as a single module with a fixed directivity and a fixed direction-dependent correction of the frequency response.
- a given audience area can be provided with very high-quality sound in fixed installations with one or more correspondingly programmed modules.
- the use of such modules with a fixed directivity and correspondingly permanently stored values for the direction-dependent correction of the frequency response of its sound transducers is also conceivable in the home.
- a spectral consistency of the reproduction can be achieved via a specifically set radiation angle that would never be achievable with individual loudspeakers for the individual frequency range. Further designs and/or modifications are possible.
- FIG. 3 shows a given audience area 3 that is to be provided with sound using a planar sound transducer arrangement 1 based on the principle of wave field synthesis (WFS).
- WFS wave field synthesis
- the common wave front 4 is divided into rectangles 105 that represent the proportions of elementary waves 8 generated by approximately the same number of sound transducers of the sound transducer arrangement 1 on the common wave front 4.
- the respective sub-area 105 which is assigned to a given number of sound transducers of the sound transducer arrangement 1, is approximately the same size. Accordingly, the sound pressure is evenly distributed on the surface of the wave front 4 at the same time.
- the audience areas 106 assigned to these sub-sections have very different areas over which this same energy of the assigned spherical wave section is distributed. The sound pressure levels in the different parts of the audience area 3 are correspondingly different.
- the virtual sound source 12 is located behind the sound transducer arrangement 1 in Fig.1.
- the position of the virtual sound source 12 determines both the curvature of the common wave front 4 and the direction in which it propagates. If the virtual sound source 12 is arranged close to the sound transducer arrangement 1, the coverage area is wide and the curvature of the common wave front 4 is strong. The surface of the common wave front 4 grows accordingly quickly with distance, and the sound pressure level therefore decreases quickly. The further away the virtual sound source 12 is placed from the WFS transducer arrangement 1, the narrower the beam angle and the smaller the curvature of the spherical section. At very great distances, an almost parallel wave front is created, the level of which hardly decreases with distance. However, this narrows the supply area 10 to such an extent that only part of the audience area 5 is supplied.
- the position of the virtual sound source 12 is therefore a compromise between a wide supply area and an acceptable sound pressure drop in the rear rows of the audience area 3 to be supplied with sound.
- the same number of transducers of the transducer arrangement 1 supplies a significantly larger portion of the audience area 3 to be supplied with sound with distance, and the sound pressure drops sharply here accordingly.
- surfaces outside the audience area 3 to be supplied with sound in the entire supply area 10 are also unintentionally hit by the common wave front 4. It is known that it is possible to supply the given audience area with several virtual sound sources that have the same signal content. A method for this is described in WO2015/022579 A3.
- the audience area 3 at the venue is basically predetermined; in practice, its shape and size can hardly be adapted to the acoustic requirements for high-quality sound.
- the area to be supplied is rarely a flat rectangle.
- the area is often asymmetrical and rises more sharply in the rear areas to ensure a clear view of the stage.
- the position of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, which can work according to the principle of wave field synthesis, is also basically predetermined because the sound source is to be localized in the stage area.
- Embodiments for methods with an essentially two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, as is known from wave field systems, to generate a closed wave front without transitions between individual beams, which is designed in its shape in the azimuth and elevation planes so that a uniform distribution of the sound pressure level over the given Audience area 3 is guaranteed are explained below using the figures Fig. 4 to 11.
- Fig. 4 shows a sound transducer arrangement 1 with a large number of sound transducers.
- An audience area 3 is provided with sound by means of the sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the individual sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 each emit elementary waves 8 during operation, which overlap to form a common wave front 4.
- the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 are provided with individual delay times ⁇ ⁇ operated, i.e.
- the sound transducers 9 emit elementary waves 8 at individual delay times.
- the common wavefront 4 is formed.
- the common wavefront 4 can be formed by operating with individual delay times ⁇ ⁇ be shaped so that it is adapted to the geometry of the audience area 3.
- the sound transducer arrangement 1 and the audience area 3 are assigned to a common coordinate system 2 in which the positions of the individual sound transducers of the sound transducer arrangement 1 are defined by position vectors ⁇ ⁇
- the exact delay times of the individual transducers can be determined by interpolation from the calculated delay times of the surrounding crossing points of the auxiliary grid if the transducers are not exactly at the origin of a position vector ⁇ ⁇ are arranged.
- the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ assigned transducer is connected to the individual delay time ⁇ ⁇ for the radiation of elementary waves 8. Basically, the individual delay times differ ⁇ ⁇ of the transducers 9 among themselves, but they can also at least partially coincide.
- the determination of the delay times ⁇ ⁇ is carried out by means of an assignment that assigns each intersection point of the auxiliary grid 5 to an intersection point of an auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3. In particular, this assignment assigns the Sound transducer 9 with position vector ⁇ ⁇ a point in the audience area 3 corresponding to a position vector ⁇ ⁇
- the assignment results in the direction vectors 7, which point from the intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5 in the direction of the assigned intersection points of the auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3.
- the standardized direction vectors in the cuboid 60 starting from the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ are each governed by the regulation determined.
- the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ Determined delay times ⁇ ⁇ of the transducer are then chosen so that the local direction 50 of the common wave front 4 at the position vector ⁇ ⁇ the direction of the normalized direction vector 61 ⁇ ⁇ ⁇
- the standardized direction vectors 61 therefore determine the shape of the common wave front 4.
- local directions 50 of the common wave front 4 can be determined by the direction vectors 7.
- the standardized direction vectors 61 are each perpendicular to the common wave front 4.
- the common wave front 4 can be shaped so that it adapts to the geometry of the audience area 3. This is done by assigning the grid points.
- the wave front 4 is then shaped so that approximately the same number of sound transducers of the sound transducer arrangement 1 are assigned to equally sized sub-areas 106 of the audience area 3.
- the corresponding sub-areas 105 of the wave front 4 then have a different size at the same time.
- the upper sub-area in the sketch is still significantly smaller than the lower one at this distance. Accordingly, in this area the sound pressure within the same wave front is significantly higher than in the lower part of the area intended for the nearby spectator seats.
- Fig.5 shows a reference surface 30 ⁇ , which models the sound transducer arrangement 1 in a coordinate system 2.
- a reference surface 30 ⁇ of the A regular, curved auxiliary grid 5 is arranged on the sound transducer arrangement 1, on which the positions of the individual sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 are aligned.
- coordinates for the individual sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 can be determined in 3D space.
- the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 themselves do not have to be mounted at the intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5; their respective delay and level are interpolated to the intersection points in three-dimensional space.
- the curvature of the reference surface 30 ⁇ and of the auxiliary grid 5 can be different in the azimuth plane than in the elevation plane; it is also possible to curve the auxiliary grid 5 in only one plane.
- the reference surface 30 ⁇ of the sound transducer arrangement 1 will usually be a flat surface and thus the auxiliary grid 5 will be a flat auxiliary grid. This corresponds to the case where the sound transducers 9 are essentially mounted in a two-dimensional arrangement.
- a flat surface is considered a special case of a curved surface.
- Fig.6 shows the assignment of the auxiliary grid 5 of a sound transducer arrangement 1 to an auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3.
- the solution approach presented here does not work from the position of a virtual sound source (as shown in Fig.3), but from the given geometry of the audience area 3 to be sounded and the geometry of the sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the audience area 3 to be sounded can have any shape, flat, curved or even rising.
- Fig. 6 shows an irregularly shaped audience area 3 to be sounded, which is not symmetrical in particular and rises more sharply in the rear area on the right than on the left.
- a coordinate system 2 is determined. Coordinate system 2 is assigned coordinate points distributed over the audience area 3 to be sounded. In Fig. 6, these coordinate points are arranged in the audience area 3 at the intersection points of an auxiliary grid 6, but they can also be distributed in the audience area 3 using other mapping methods.
- an auxiliary grid 5 is assigned to coordinate system 2, by means of which the positions of the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 can be determined.
- the auxiliary grid is shown in Fig. 5 as a flat, regular auxiliary grid. In principle, however, the auxiliary grid can also be curved, i.e. have curved lines.
- the auxiliary grid 5 can be arranged on a reference surface by which the sound transducer arrangement 1 is modeled.
- the number of coordinate points in the audience area 3 corresponds to the number of intersection points of the auxiliary grid 6. In this way, each intersection point of the auxiliary grid 5 can be assigned a coordinate point of the auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3.
- the distribution of the coordinate points should be over the entire audience area 3 with as even a distance as possible between the individual coordinate points.
- Each intersection point of the grid 5 is assigned a coordinate point with the position ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ , ⁇ ) in the audience area 3.
- the connecting line 7 between the crossing points of the auxiliary grid 5 and its assigned coordinate point in the audience area 3 then forms a vector in the coordinate system 2, which is the basis for calculating the running time and level of the audio signal.
- the illustrated flat auxiliary grid 5 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 has the shape of a rectangle, the aspect ratio of which is the same as that of the planned sound transducer arrangement 1, for example in the form of a sound transducer array.
- the distance between the grid lines of the auxiliary grid 5 can be different in the horizontal and vertical planes, but should at least correspond to the number of rows and columns of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 can be mounted with their acoustic center in the intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5. However, their position can also deviate from these intersection points, with their respective run times and levels being determined by interpolating the values calculated for the surrounding grid points.
- a higher number of grid lines improves the accuracy of the interpolation.
- a smaller number of grid lines means that the wave front is not uniformly curved, but rather composed of flat partial surfaces.
- the resulting diffraction effects lead to local irregularities in the frequency response.
- physical sound transducers 9 do not have to be assigned to all intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5. This enables the assembly to be interrupted in the areas in which the bass-midrange sound transducers 9 have their sound outlet opening.
- all sound transducers 9 can be distributed slightly irregularly on the surface. as described in DE 102009006762 A1. This allows unwanted aliasing effects in the audience area 3 to be reduced because the resulting comb filter effects in the frequency response are statistically balanced out somewhat.
- the auxiliary grid 6 placed over the audience area 3 completely encloses it.
- the auxiliary grid 6 is adapted in its shape to the audience area 3. In principle, this can be done manually. In practice, however, several hundred to several thousand grid points are necessary so that the distance between the sound transducers 9 is sufficiently small to achieve a reproduction that is largely free of audible aliasing effects.
- the small number of grid lines in the sketches serves to provide clarity in explaining the functional principle. It is therefore advantageous to automatically determine the coordinate points in the audience area 3 using a 3D CAD file of the audience area 3 with a suitable mapping process. In this case, areas that should not be directly hit by the common wave front 4 because they emit unwanted reflections can also remain free of assigned grid points.
- Fig.7 illustrates by way of example how the local curvature 50 of the wave front 4, which according to the described method does not have to be a sphere section, arises from the superposition of the elementary waves 8 of the surrounding sound transducers 9.
- the acoustic In the example, the centers of the sound transducers 9 are mounted on the crossing points of the auxiliary grid for simplification.
- the individual sound transducer 9, shown in black in the sketch, has an undirected half-space radiation according to the principle of wave field synthesis.
- the elementary wave 8 generated by it alone cannot therefore form a directional vector.
- the local directional vector ⁇ of the wave front assigned to it only arises at some distance from the sound transducer arrangement 1 by superposition of the elementary waves 8 of the surrounding sound transducers.
- the point described by the vector ⁇ lies on a crossing point of the auxiliary grid 6 of the audience area 3.
- the directional vector 7 ⁇ can also be determined without the aid of the auxiliary grids 5 and 6.
- the direction vector 7 ⁇ starts from a position vector ⁇ on a reference surface 30 ⁇ , which models the sound transducer arrangement 1, and points to a position vector ⁇ in the audience area 3, or to a position vector ⁇ which describes a point on a reference surface ⁇ 30 modelling the audience area 3.
- the following describes a method of how delay times and levels for the individual sound transducers 9 are derived from given direction vectors 7 so that the superposition of their elementary waves 8 is superimposed to form a wave front which is consistently aligned with the given audience area 3.
- the exemplary direction vector 7 ⁇ from Fig.6 is scaled to the length of the standardised direction vector 61 ⁇ ⁇ which is referred to as is defined.
- the desired wavefront generated by the transducer arrangement 1, in particular in the form of a curved or planar array, can be locally approximated by a plane wave propagating along (i.e.
- Each local plane wave can be directed in the desired direction by operating the transducers 9 of the transducer arrangement 1 according to the corresponding delay times of the signal.
- the delay time ⁇ ⁇ at any position ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) on the reference surface 30 ⁇ of the sound transducer arrangement 1 is described by the scalar-valued delay function ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ).
- the gradient of a scalar-valued function ⁇ of several variables is a vector field ⁇ , the components of which can be determined by partial derivatives of ⁇ , in particular
- the deceleration gradient ⁇ ( ⁇ , ⁇ ) can be determined as follows:
- the scalars ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ can be physically interpreted as the local differentials of the path lengths between the plane wave and the tangential plane of the transducer arrangement 1.
- ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ equal to the sizes illustrated in Fig.8 ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ , which are the x- and z-components of the vector ⁇ ⁇
- the distance between the transducers 9 is finite.
- the compensation according to equation (9) corrects this according to a cosine function of the angle ⁇ in Fig. 6. With an even distribution of the coordinate points ⁇ a very homogeneous distribution of the sound pressure over the entire audience area 3 to be sounded is guaranteed.
- Fig. 9 shows that the audience area 3 to be sounded can also be divided into individual sub-areas 701,702,703 with different signal content. In principle, sub-areas of the sound transducer arrangement 1 could then also be assigned to these sub-areas. A much more precise sound is achieved, however, if the high directivity of the entire arrangement is used to direct the signal content to the desired audience areas 3.
- each of the sub-areas 701, 702, 703, the number of crossing points 6 then corresponds to the number of crossing points 5 of the auxiliary grid of the sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the division into sub-areas is not useful if the sub-areas are not sufficiently spatially separated. With coherent signal content, comb filter effects would then arise at the area boundaries.
- Individual sub-areas can also be smaller than the assigned sound transducer 9 area, provided that the crossing points of the auxiliary grid in the audience area 3 are closer together than in the auxiliary grid of the sound transducer arrangement 1. In this case, concave wave fronts arise whose sound pressure level is higher in the audience area 3 than on the generating radiator surface itself.
- the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 then generates the same concave wave front according to the vector-based method described as in a two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 according to the The principle of wave field synthesis with a virtual sound source is created at this point.
- the coordinates of the grid points 5 on the reference surface of the sound transducer arrangement 1 and their associated coordinates 6 in the audience area 3 it is also possible to compensate for the sound pressure drop at higher frequencies through airborne sound insulation. For a given humidity, the frequency-dependent attenuation values of the air per meter are known exactly.
- a corresponding inverse equalization curve can then be assigned to each sound transducer 9 because the distance to the corresponding audience seat (given by the length of the direction vector ⁇ in Fig.7) is known.
- the sound pressure drop at the upper limit of the audio range can rise significantly above ten dB in dry air.
- this frequency range must be controlled significantly higher in a flat sound transducer arrangement 1 because the level gain due to the improved adaptation of the synchronously operating loudspeaker group only takes effect at longer wavelengths.
- the additional compensation of the airborne sound insulation for the audience areas 3 that are far away can therefore bring the system to the limit of its controllability at high signal levels in the upper audio frequency range.
- One solution to this problem is to arrange the coordinate points ⁇ closer together with the distance to the sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the audience areas 3 that are far away are then assigned a smaller partial area 106 for the same number of sound transducers 9.
- Each halving of the area causes a level increase of 3 dB, by which the control of the assigned sound transducers 9 would have to be reduced so that the sound pressure level in the entire audience area 3 remains almost the same.
- the correspondingly reduced control signal is associated with a larger headroom in the assigned amplifiers. This can then be used to equalize the control signals more.
- the localization of the sound source in the described process differs fundamentally from the localization of a virtual point sound source in wave field synthesis.
- Virtual sound sources are used in wave field synthesis in principle, independent of the listener's position in the coverage area, it is localized at its virtual starting point, comparable to a real sound source.
- the wave front tailored to the audience area 3 does not originate from defined positions of virtual sound sources. It arises, as it were, from an extended source of many different starting points in the area behind the transducer surface.
- the viewer in the front left seat in Fig.4 will assign the starting point of the wave front to the lower left corner of the transducer arrangement 1, for the viewer in the back right the sound comes from the upper right corner of the transducer arrangement 1. This is not a disadvantage for reproduction without optical reference to the sound source, but spatial reproduction is only possible to a limited extent as shown in Fig.4.
- the method can be assigned to the field of wave field synthesis because the theoretical derivation of wave field synthesis from the Kirchhoff-Helmholtz integral makes it possible to generate any desired shape of wave front (Jens Ahrens: The Single-layer Potential Approach Applied to Sound Field Synthesis Including Cases of Non-enclosing Distributions of Secondary Sources, Dissertation, Technical University of Berlin, 2010). Further embodiments So far it has been assumed that the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 are arranged in a regular grid. In practice, however, the distribution of the sound transducers 9 can also be irregular. First, the travel times ⁇ are calculated for a sufficiently dense regular grid, after which the travel times for the irregularly placed sound transducers are interpolated.
- Fig.10 shows a complexly designed audience area 3 with sub-areas 802 and illustrates an assembly of the sound transducer arrangement 1 with sound transducers 9, wherein the assembly is adapted to the complex design of the audience area 3.
- the assignment between points on the sound transducer arrangement 1 and points in the audience area 3 is made by assigning intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 to intersection points of the auxiliary grid 6 of the audience area 3.
- intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5 are assigned to sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1, in other words, intersection points of the auxiliary grid 5 remain unequipped. In particular, unequipped intersection points are found between equipped intersection points.
- the shape of the sound transducer arrangement 1 can thus be adapted to the complex design and/or geometry of the audience area 3 in permanent installations. This enables the sound transducers to be used more effectively.
- the auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3 can, for example, be a rectangle, and in particular it can extend beyond the audience area. Irregular shapes of the auxiliary grid 6 can lead to incorrect results in the calculations according to the method described.
- Crossing points of the auxiliary grid 6 in the audience area 3, to which no audience is assigned, i.e. which in the present case lies outside the sub-areas 5a, 5b, 5c of the audience area 3 to be sounded, are assigned auxiliary grid points of the auxiliary grid 5 of the transducer surface, which are not equipped with transducers or are switched off.
- Any bass-midrange transducers used are also aligned with the auxiliary grid 5 of the transducer arrangement 1.
- the calculation of their running times and levels is based on the nearby grid points.
- the time shift in the event of a possible depth offset must be compensated.
- the phase position of subwoofers can also be effectively adjusted in this way.
- the shortest of all calculated running times to the individual transducers is subtracted from all calculated running times, so that the front of the wave front adapted to the audience area 3 is always generated immediately.
- a further embodiment relates to a device that is shaped according to the rules of the method described. It can be used to create a single wave front, the shape of which is adapted to the given listening area, without electronic Time shift of the signal can be generated from a mono signal.
- Fig. 11 shows an example of a mechanically curved sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the audience area 3 to be sounded described with reference to Fig. 6, can be supplied with a tailored common wave front 4.
- the operation of the sound transducers 9 of the sound transducer arrangement 1 is controlled according to the delay times ⁇ obtained using the method described. ⁇ realized mechanically. All sound transducers are supplied with a coherent signal, i.e. from a mono signal source.
- the mechanical realization is achieved by suitable positioning of the sound transducers 9 on the mechanically curved sound transducer arrangement 90, in particular by a suitable spatial offset, in particular an offset in the propagation direction of the common wave front, of the sound transducers 9 to each other.
- a distance ⁇ ⁇ starting from the corresponding grid point of a plane auxiliary grid 5 along the extended diagonal of the unit vector 61 ⁇ ⁇ certain cuboid 40.
- the new coordinates for the acoustic center of the relevant sound transducer 9 and also its orientation can be determined in the right-angled triangles of the cuboid 40.
- the delay times calculated using the methods described for the individual sound transducers 9 arise from the mechanical offset of the acoustic centers of the respective sound transducers 9 along the diagonal Sd of the respective cuboid.
- the different signal levels for the individual sound transducers 9 of this two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 can then be approximately realized on a common output amplifier by suitable parallel and series connection of the sound transducers 9 or by connecting them to different amplifiers, each of which is assigned to sound transducers 9 with approximately the same level values.
- the method can then also be realized by a device for the transverse displacement of sound transducers, as described in WO 2015/004526/A2.
- the displacement ⁇ ⁇ of the acoustic center from the grid point of the original sound transducer grid is then obtained from the quotient
- a single mechanical device cannot generate spatial sound in the audience area 3. It is suitable for ensuring sound with manageable effort in which the distribution of the sound pressure level in the entire audience area 3 is very even and which ensures a high level of speech intelligibility even in acoustically unfavorable rooms.
- the shape of the acoustic common wave front 4, which is composed by superposition of elementary waves 8 of the sound transducers 9, can be determined from the given geometry of the audience area 3 and the sound transducer arrangement 1 in such a way that in a common coordinate system 2, each intersection point of a regular, at least partially flat and / or curved grid that is assigned to the sound transducers is assigned a coordinate point in the audience area 3, whereby a vector results from their connecting line, from which the delay time for the respectively assigned sound transducer 9 can be calculated by mathematical combination, whereby the local curvature of the Wave front, which is created by superposition of the elementary waves 8 of the surrounding sound transducers 9, advances in the direction of this vector, so that a closed wave front is created that can reach the entire audience area 3
- the coordinate points in the plane of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 are crossing points of a flat or curved grid to which 2 coordinate points in the audience area 3 are assigned in a common coordinate system, whereby the connecting lines between the respectively assigned grid points and points in the audience area 3 do not cross or intersect.
- the number of grid lines in the plane of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 in the horizontal and vertical directions corresponds to the number of sound transducers installed in the rows and columns of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1.
- the number of grid lines can be greater than the number of sound transducers 9 in the rows and columns of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, whereby the acoustic center of the individual sound transducers 9 can be arranged at the intersection point of the grid lines.
- the values for delay time and / or level can be determined, for example, by interpolating the values of the surrounding grid points. that the reference points in the audience area 3 can be adapted to the requirements of the geometry of the audience area 3 in all three spatial dimensions, whereby care must be taken that the areas between the individual grid points remain approximately the same size over the entire audience area 3, which results in a relatively even distribution of the sound pressure level over the entire audience area 3.
- the vectors resulting from the difference between the coordinates of the grid point assigned to the respective sound transducer 9 in the plane of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 and the respective position of the assigned coordinate point in the audience area 3 are based on components of the unit vector ⁇ ⁇ to create a mathematical basis for determining the time differences between neighboring sound transducers. In principle, not all crossing points of the auxiliary grid have to be assigned physical sound transducers 9 that emit the same frequency range.
- the influence of the angle that the synthesized wave front takes at a given grid point to the plane of the sound transducer arrangement 1 on the signal level perceived at the associated point in the audience area 3 is compensated by compensating the level of the sound transducer associated with the respective point with the cosine function of the relevant angle, the value of this cosine function corresponding to the value of the component of the unit vector ⁇ ⁇ corresponds.
- auxiliary grids in the audience area can also be assigned to the intersection points of the flat or curved grid in the plane of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, each with the same number of points as the grid in the plane of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, whereby sub-areas within the audience area can, for example, be supplied with different signal content simultaneously.
- the reference points in the audience area 3 can be distributed more closely with increasing distance from the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, for example with the intention of making the areas between the reference points smaller with the distance from the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1, so that the assigned sound transducers 9 of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 can be controlled with a lower level with unchanged sound pressure in the respective area, whereby more headroom is available for compensating for the drop in height due to the airborne sound insulation in these areas.
- the influence of airborne sound insulation on the signal at the audience seat for the individual sound transducers 9 can be compensated for by compensating their respective input signal with the inverse equalization of the influence of airborne sound insulation at a given air humidity according to the distance ⁇ of the assigned vector.
- individual audience areas 3 can be excluded from the supply, for example temporarily. For example, if they are not occupied at an event, which improves the direct sound component in the rest of the audience area 3.
- the run times with which the individual sound transducers 9 of the two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement 1 emit according to one of the method variants described above are not realized by electronic delay of the signal content, but by the mechanical positioning of the sound transducers, which are controlled with coherent signals, whereby the signal levels for the respective sound transducer 9 correspond to the values determined for the original crossing points of the grid.
- the direction-dependent correction of the frequency response of sound wave fronts generated by a two-dimensional sound transducer arrangement according to the principle of wave field synthesis or beamforming methods, for example in extension of the method described in DE 102021207302 A1 for sounding a given audience area, in which several input signals can be assigned simultaneously and independently of one another to different audience areas, with the signal levels being adjusted so that a very balanced sound pressure level is guaranteed in the entire audience area, by additionally inserting corresponding correction elements in the signal path of each input channel for each relevant sound transducer, non-linearities in the frequency response of individual Wave fronts across the entire audience area are compensated as far as possible by linearizing the radiation of each sound transducer for each of the input channels of the system, depending on the local radiation direction of the wave front to be corrected in relation to the front surface of the two-dimensional transducer arrangement, based on an inverse forward correction of the factors that physically influence their radiation.
- non-linearities of the frequency response for the individual transducers of the transducer arrangement which depend on the radiation direction are compensated as far as possible by a forward correction in that the data stored under the 3D spherical coordinates of the respective transducers installed in the module are determined and stored individually in the low-reflection room so that their frequency response in the radiation direction of the respective wavefront is retrieved from the memory using the spherical coordinates ⁇ and ⁇ and inverted and normalized as a function Ginv (f) largely compensates for the frequency response error of the respective transducer in the local radiation direction of the respective wavefront by an inverse filter additionally inserted into the respective signal path.
- the frequency response errors caused by acoustic obstacles in the direction of propagation of the wave front can be largely compensated for by means of forward correction in that the differences between the 3D spherical coordinates of the individual sound transducers between an unhindered radiation and the radiation behind the structure that hinders the propagation of the respective wave front are spatially recorded and stored as 3D spherical coordinates, so that the differences of both frequency responses in the radiation direction of the respective wave front are retrieved using the polar coordinates ⁇ and ⁇ and, normalized and inverted as a function Hinv (f), largely compensate for the frequency response error caused by the acoustic obstacle in the local radiation direction of the wave front in question by an inverse filter additionally inserted into the relevant signal path.
- the influence of airborne sound insulation on the frequency response of the respective wave front can be largely compensated by using the current values for relative humidity (in %), air pressure (in kPa) and temperature (in K) in the audience area to directly calculate the attenuation curve for a distance of 1 meter from the known mathematical relationships and multiplying the inverted and normalized values by the distance of the sound transducer to the audience area, to which the local part of the wave front in question is directed, in order to compensate for the distance-related level loss of the wave front in question in the direction of the audience area using a filter in the signal path with the resulting function Ainv(f).
- the inversion of the frequency response resulting from the stored or calculated data can be connected upstream of the filters in the signal path in order to compensate for a drop in frequency response by means of a correspondingly higher amplification and to reduce a resonance increase by attenuating the signal in the corresponding frequency range, whereby the correction can be carried out in octaves, thirds or smaller frequency steps and a shift in the overall level of the relevant channel upstream of the filter is compensated for by a corresponding correction of the overall level of the correction curve, in which a maximum value for the compensation then prevents the subsequent stages in individual frequency ranges from being overdriven.
- additional polar frequency response data and inverse or non-inverse filters that cause a direction-dependent change in frequency response for selected wave fronts and with which certain preferences of individual audience groups or the correction of hearing loss of individual people or extended artistic design options for the spatial sound field or other acoustic goals can be inserted into the signal path as an additional correction element.
- the order of the correction elements in the signal path can be freely selected and individual correction options can be bridged or omitted.
- fixed correction values can be stored in the system if the direction of the wave fronts is fixed in the system.
- systems with a fixed directivity and a fixed direction-dependent correction of the frequency response can work independently as individual modules or can be combined with other modules that are programmed accordingly to form a fixed programmed transducer array.
- the data on the directivity characteristics can be stored in the individual modules and read and overwritten from a central memory via a data bus in a setup process. Further embodiments are described below.
- Example 1 Method for providing sound to at least one audience area (3) by means of at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) with a plurality of sound transducers (9), wherein the individual sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) each emit elementary waves (8) which superimpose themselves to form a common wave front (4), characterized in that a) the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) and the at least one audience area (3) are geometrically linked to one another by a coordinate system (2) and b) between the physical positions of the individual sound transducers (9) in the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) and position vectors ⁇ ⁇ for determining coordinates in the area of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) there is a spatial assignment, and furthermore c) an assignment of points of the coordinate system (2) to points in the at least one audience area (5) according to a position vector ⁇ ⁇ consists of d) in the coordinate system (2) there are direction vectors, in particular normalized direction vectors and where e) depends on the spatial assignment of the position vectors
- Example 3 Method according to Example 1, characterized in that the sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) are arranged in a three-dimensional area, in particular a room, in particular such that at least a subset of the sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) is arranged on a reference surface (30) and the positions of the remaining sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) can be determined by an offset (91) in the three-dimensional area.
- Example 4 Method according to at least one of the preceding examples, characterized in that the operation of the sound transducers (9) with delay time ⁇ ⁇ by control via a computer system and/or mechanically, in particular by spatial offset (91) of the sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) relative to one another.
- Example 5 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the at least one audience area (3) has at least partially a concave and/or at least partially a convex shape.
- Example 6 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the at least one audience area (3) can be described as a continuous surface.
- Example 7 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the at least one audience area (3) can be described as a discontinuous surface which is composed of at least two continuous surfaces.
- Example 8 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ a regular grid.
- Example 9 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the position vectors ⁇ ⁇ a regular grid (6) on an area assigned to the at least one public area (3).
- Example 10 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the assignment assigned to each position vector ⁇ ⁇ the point in at least one audience area (3) corresponding to the position vector ⁇ ⁇ assigns, can be determined by means of connecting lines from the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) to the audience area (3).
- Example 11 Method according to at least one of the previous examples, characterized in that the levels at which the sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) are operated are adjusted so that the sound pressure in the at least one audience area (3) is homogeneous.
- Example 13 Method according to at least one of the preceding examples, characterized in that the at least one audience area (3) has at least two sub-areas which are exposed to different signal content.
- Example 14 Method according to at least one of the preceding examples, characterized in that the common wave front (4) is shaped such that it is adapted to the geometry of the at least one audience area (3) by assigning the grid points and the common wave front (4) is then shaped such that substantially the same number of sound transducers (9) of the sound transducer arrangement (1) is assigned to equally sized sub-areas (106) of the at least one audience area (3).
- Example 15 Method according to at least one of the preceding examples, characterized in that sub-areas of the at least one audience area (3) are assigned sub-areas of the sound transducer arrangement (1), to which a different audio content can be simultaneously assigned, wherein a directivity of the sound transducer device (1) is used to align signal contents to predetermined parts of the at least one audience area (3), wherein in each of the sub-areas (701, 702, 703) the number of crossing points (6) then corresponds to the Number of crossing points (5) of the auxiliary grid of the sound transducer arrangement (1).
- Example 16 Method for determining delay times ⁇ ⁇ for operating sound transducers (9) of at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) with a plurality of sound transducers (9) ⁇ for generating elementary waves (8) according to the delay times ⁇ ⁇ for providing sound to at least one audience area (3), comprising the following steps - determining a coordinate system (2) by which o the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) is approximately described as a two-dimensional reference surface (30) ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) and o the at least one audience area (3), - determining position vectors ⁇ on the reference surface (30) ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1), from which the positions of the sound transducers (9) of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) can be determined, - determining an assignment which assigns each position vector ⁇ on the reference surface (30) ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) a position vector ⁇ corresponding to a point in the at least one audience area (3), - determining direction vectors,
- Example 18 Method according to example 16 or 17, characterized in that the position vectors ⁇ describe the positions of the sound transducers (9).
- Example 20 Method according to Example 19, characterized in that the connecting lines (7) for determining the standardized direction vectors (61) ⁇ ⁇ do not cross or intersect in pairs.
- Example 21 Method according to at least one of examples 16 to 20, characterized in that the assignment between the position vector ⁇ and the position vector ⁇ is carried out automatically, in particular based on a 3D CAD file of the at least one audience area (3).
- Example 22 Method according to at least one of examples 19 to 21, characterized in that the position vectors ⁇ are evenly distributed on the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one audience area (3), and thus correspond to evenly distributed points in the at least one audience area (3).
- Example 23 Method according to at least one of examples 16 to 22, characterized in that the reference surface ⁇ of the at least one audience area (3) is described by an auxiliary grid (6) on which the position vectors ⁇ are at least partially intersection points.
- Example 24 Method according to at least one of examples 16 to 23, characterized in that the reference surface (30) ⁇ of the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) is described by an auxiliary grid (5) on which the position vectors ⁇ are at least partially intersection points.
- Example 28 Method according to Example 27, characterized
- Example 30 Computer program product for determining delay times ⁇ ⁇ for operating sound transducers (2) ⁇ at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) with a plurality of sound transducers (2) ⁇ for generating elementary waves (3) according to the delay times for sound reinforcement of at least one audience area (5), characterized in that the computer program product comprises means for executing at least one instruction for determining delay times ⁇ ⁇ for sound transducers ⁇ according to at least one of examples 1 to 15 or 16 to 29.
- Example 31 A device for providing sound to at least one audience area (3), which comprises at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) with a plurality of sound transducers (9), wherein the at least one sound transducer arrangement (1) can be operated according to a method according to at least one of examples 1 to 15.
- Example 33 Device according to example 31 or 32, characterized in that the different travel times for the sound transducers (9) of the sound transducer arrangement (1) are realized using a mechanical or geometric positioning of the sound transducers (9), which are controlled with coherent signals, wherein in particular the signal levels for the respective sound transducer (9) may correspond to the values determined for the original crossing points of the grid. Further embodiments are described below: Hiding a sound reinforcement system behind an acoustically semi-transparent panel results in absorbed or reflected sound energy, which leads to gain changes in the audio spectrum.
- the transfer function (TF) is the frequency-dependent reduction or amplification of the sound level of a sound source when passing through the panel used to hide the sound reinforcement system.
- TF compensation is achieved by equalizing the average TF over several angles or simply taking the TF on axis and applying the inverse curve as a profile of a compensation stage.
- a preliminary evaluation of the TF in the anechoic chamber led to the conclusion that the evaluated panel introduced very different gain variations at different angles for the same frequency. This would mean that the spectral balance in the audience area would deviate significantly at different angles and distances to the concealed audio module, reducing the spectral homogeneity.
- TF compensation as described above would not be sufficient, but an angle-dependent spatial transfer function would be required.
- Wave field synthesis and 3D audio beamforming technology are based on the high-resolution sensitivity and 3D directivity balloons of the transducers built into the audio module.
- the optimization and equalization engine would compensate for the effect of the panel in every direction, not just on-axis, while performing similarly as if the panel were not present.
- Changes in the transducer's radiation balloon caused by panel resonances, reflections, or acoustic absorption at certain angles would be known in advance and partially compensated to achieve the desired spectral profile across the entire listening area.
- the task here is to capture the transducer's directional balloon when it is placed behind a carbon fiber panel, for example.
- One possibility is to use a holographic measurement approach to determine the directivity of a loudspeaker. This method uses special solutions of the wave equation (spherical harmonics, Hankel function) to determine the 3D sound pressure of the audio device. Compared to conventional measurement methods, this provides more comprehensive and accurate measurement data while minimizing costs (e.g. for an expensive measurement room) and measurement time.
- the device under test remains in a fixed position in the middle of the scanner.
- the robot arm moves a microphone around the device under test and records the sound pressure in the near field.
- direct sound separation can be used, which uses additional phase information to detect the direction of the sound wave and which can remove all room reflections from the direct sound of the loudspeaker.
- the measurement system provides accurate free-field data in any environment (e.g. workshop or office). For example, using an example pair of woofer and tweeter, the effect of an acoustic panel used to cover the audio module can be evaluated. Since the measurements in the near field do not include any signal processing, the spectral power outside the working range of the transducer is shown.
- the frequency responses of the individual transducers with and without the acoustic panel are shown in Fig. 12. Comparing the acoustic results of both measurements shows a transmission loss in the near-axis frequency response. In a conventional approach, these frequency responses would serve as the basis for calculating the transmission gain and compensate for this energy loss using a DSP. However, if the off-axis frequency responses are also taken into account, the acoustically semi-transparent panel causes further interference. There are additional resonances that affect the radiation pattern at certain frequencies, especially in the range between 2 kHz and 5 Hz. Above f>7kHz, the measurements show higher transmission losses on-axis than off-axis, resulting in a lower directivity index and a slightly larger radiation angle when the panel is in place.
- the spatial transfer function of the acoustic panel in Fig. 13 shows the angle dependence of the gain changes across the spectrum.
- the spatial transfer function is the absolute spectral gain difference between the bare transducer and the same transducer behind the acoustic panel after applying a 1 octave frequency smoothing and a 15 degree spatial smoothing.
- the spatial smoothing was done to prevent isolated artifacts introduced by the panel used for the measurements from being introduced into the overall compensation for other panels with different characteristics: differences in bracing, panel stiffness and manufacturing, or slight differences in panel positioning.
- the 3kHz frequency was used as an example in Fig. 13.
- the level difference between 0o (on-axis) and 45o is about 2 dB; therefore, any global spectral correction at 2kHz would work effectively for one angle, but over- or undercompensate at other angles. Spatial transfer function differences are difficult to solve with a single, global equalizer.
- 3D spectral compensation as part of the optimization engine, the transducers used to reproduce the beam are individually spatially balanced, resulting in optimal spectral balance as the listener moves across the audience area.
- Fig.14 shows example transfer functions of an optimized beam with an opening angle of 120o under different scenarios for different angles (0o, 30o and 60o) at 1/3 octave resolution: a simple audio module (black), the same module and beam configuration occluded with the MDI panel in front (red), and finally the audio module occluded with the MDI panel and spatially compensated with the algorithms.
- Fig. 14 illustrates the different spectral variations at different angles, which can only be solved with individual equalization. Spatial compensation for the acoustic panel was implemented to restore the overall spectral balance of the desired frequency response. Isolated local artifacts or spectral colorations resulting from panel resonances or reflections were not part of the correction, as their compensation proved ineffective.
- Audio systems can be concealed in a variety of ways. Acoustically transparent materials such as fabric or perforated screens allow sound to pass through with minimal loss of acoustic performance and can be effective in certain environments. Problems can arise when there is visible distortion when projecting video content. To solve this problem, a high-resolution video projection solution using a micro-perforated carbon fiber panel can be used. This proved to be very effective as it provided a seamless projection surface, but it brought with it some disadvantages for the underlying sound system, namely angle-dependent fluctuations in the transfer function. A near-field scanning system has proven to be an effective and robust method to capture the directivity of loudspeakers, even those hidden behind a panel.
- Spectral balance correction equalizes the level differences between different angles in 3D space for the same frequency across the entire audio spectrum. This feature significantly increased the spectral homogeneity of the audio beams used and represents a clear advantage over the traditional compensation methods otherwise used.
- Sound transducer arrangement 2 Common coordinate system 3 Audience area 4 Wavefront formed from elementary waves 5 Auxiliary grid on the reference surface of the sound transducer arrangement 6 Auxiliary grid in the audience area 7 Direction vector 8 Elementary waves 9 Sound transducer 10 Supply area of the wavefront 105 Partial areas of the wavefront 106 Partial areas of the audience area 12 Virtual sound source 30 Curved sound transducer surface 31 Normal 40 Cuboid for vector determination 50 Local direction of the common wavefront 60 Normalized cuboid with diagonal one 61 Normalized direction vector 701,702, 703 Partial areas of the audience area 801 Crossing points used 802 Fixed audience areas 90 Mechanically curved sound transducer arrangement 91 Spatial offset 1
Landscapes
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Otolaryngology (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Circuit For Audible Band Transducer (AREA)
- Obtaining Desirable Characteristics In Audible-Bandwidth Transducers (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (4)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| CN202380081686.9A CN120266494A (zh) | 2022-11-09 | 2023-10-19 | 用于对声波阵面的频率响应进行方向相关校正的方法 |
| JP2025526469A JP2025538170A (ja) | 2022-11-09 | 2023-10-19 | 音響波面の周波数応答の方向依存補正の方法 |
| EP23800753.8A EP4616612A1 (de) | 2022-11-09 | 2023-10-19 | Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen korrektur des frequenzganges von schallwellenfronten |
| KR1020257017167A KR20250105396A (ko) | 2022-11-09 | 2023-10-19 | 음파면의 주파수 응답의 방향 의존적 보정을 위한 방법 |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| DE102022129642.3 | 2022-11-09 | ||
| DE102022129642.3A DE102022129642A1 (de) | 2022-11-09 | 2022-11-09 | Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen Korrektur des Frequenzganges von Schallwellenfronten |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| WO2024099733A1 true WO2024099733A1 (de) | 2024-05-16 |
Family
ID=88695585
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP2023/079178 Ceased WO2024099733A1 (de) | 2022-11-09 | 2023-10-19 | Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen korrektur des frequenzganges von schallwellenfronten |
Country Status (6)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| EP (1) | EP4616612A1 (de) |
| JP (1) | JP2025538170A (de) |
| KR (1) | KR20250105396A (de) |
| CN (1) | CN120266494A (de) |
| DE (1) | DE102022129642A1 (de) |
| WO (1) | WO2024099733A1 (de) |
Citations (10)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20060109992A1 (en) * | 2003-05-15 | 2006-05-25 | Thomas Roeder | Device for level correction in a wave field synthesis system |
| US20070217621A1 (en) * | 2004-08-26 | 2007-09-20 | Yamaha Corporation | Audio reproduction apparatus |
| DE102009006762A1 (de) | 2009-01-30 | 2010-08-05 | Oellers, Helmut | Reduktion von Aliasingeffekten |
| US20140185817A1 (en) * | 2011-09-07 | 2014-07-03 | Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft Zur Foerderung Der Angewandten Forschung E.V. | Apparatus, method and electroacoustic system for reverberation time extension |
| WO2015004526A2 (de) | 2013-07-12 | 2015-01-15 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Variable vorrichtung zum ausrichten von schallwellenfronten |
| WO2015022579A2 (de) | 2013-08-10 | 2015-02-19 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Verfahren zum betreiben einer anordnung aus schallwandlern nach dem prinzip der wellenfeldsynthese |
| WO2015036845A1 (de) | 2013-08-10 | 2015-03-19 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Wellenfeldsynthese-system |
| DE102019208631A1 (de) | 2019-06-13 | 2020-12-17 | Holoplot Gmbh | Vorrichtung und Verfahren zur Beschallung eines räumlichen Bereichs |
| WO2020252063A1 (en) | 2019-06-11 | 2020-12-17 | MSG Sports and Entertainment, LLC | Integrated audiovisual system |
| DE102021207302A1 (de) | 2021-07-09 | 2023-01-12 | Holoplot Gmbh | Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Beschallung mindestens eines Publikumsbereiches |
-
2022
- 2022-11-09 DE DE102022129642.3A patent/DE102022129642A1/de active Pending
-
2023
- 2023-10-19 WO PCT/EP2023/079178 patent/WO2024099733A1/de not_active Ceased
- 2023-10-19 EP EP23800753.8A patent/EP4616612A1/de active Pending
- 2023-10-19 JP JP2025526469A patent/JP2025538170A/ja active Pending
- 2023-10-19 CN CN202380081686.9A patent/CN120266494A/zh active Pending
- 2023-10-19 KR KR1020257017167A patent/KR20250105396A/ko active Pending
Patent Citations (10)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20060109992A1 (en) * | 2003-05-15 | 2006-05-25 | Thomas Roeder | Device for level correction in a wave field synthesis system |
| US20070217621A1 (en) * | 2004-08-26 | 2007-09-20 | Yamaha Corporation | Audio reproduction apparatus |
| DE102009006762A1 (de) | 2009-01-30 | 2010-08-05 | Oellers, Helmut | Reduktion von Aliasingeffekten |
| US20140185817A1 (en) * | 2011-09-07 | 2014-07-03 | Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft Zur Foerderung Der Angewandten Forschung E.V. | Apparatus, method and electroacoustic system for reverberation time extension |
| WO2015004526A2 (de) | 2013-07-12 | 2015-01-15 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Variable vorrichtung zum ausrichten von schallwellenfronten |
| WO2015022579A2 (de) | 2013-08-10 | 2015-02-19 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Verfahren zum betreiben einer anordnung aus schallwandlern nach dem prinzip der wellenfeldsynthese |
| WO2015036845A1 (de) | 2013-08-10 | 2015-03-19 | Advanced Acoustic Sf Gmbh | Wellenfeldsynthese-system |
| WO2020252063A1 (en) | 2019-06-11 | 2020-12-17 | MSG Sports and Entertainment, LLC | Integrated audiovisual system |
| DE102019208631A1 (de) | 2019-06-13 | 2020-12-17 | Holoplot Gmbh | Vorrichtung und Verfahren zur Beschallung eines räumlichen Bereichs |
| DE102021207302A1 (de) | 2021-07-09 | 2023-01-12 | Holoplot Gmbh | Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Beschallung mindestens eines Publikumsbereiches |
Non-Patent Citations (3)
| Title |
|---|
| A.J.BERKHOUT, A HOLOGRAPHIE APPROACH TO ACOUSTIC CONTROL, J.AUDIO ENG.SOC, vol. 36, no. 12, 1988 |
| JENS AHRENS: "The Single-layer Potential Approach Applied to Sound Field Synthesis Including Cases of Non-enclosing Distributions of Secondary Sources", 2010, TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITÄT |
| MARANTZ: "NR1608 AV Receiver", INTERNET, 1 June 2017 (2017-06-01), Internet, XP055705610, Retrieved from the Internet <URL:https://www.us.marantz.com/shop/avreceivers/nr1608?status=discontinue> [retrieved on 20200616] * |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| JP2025538170A (ja) | 2025-11-26 |
| DE102022129642A1 (de) | 2024-05-16 |
| KR20250105396A (ko) | 2025-07-08 |
| CN120266494A (zh) | 2025-07-04 |
| EP4616612A1 (de) | 2025-09-17 |
Similar Documents
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| DE69525163T2 (de) | Tonaufnahme- und wiedergabesysteme | |
| EP3005737B1 (de) | Mischpult, verfahren und computerprogramm zum bereitstellen eines tonsignals | |
| EP1013141B1 (de) | Verfahren und anordnung zur wiedergabe eines stereophonen audiosignals | |
| EP1671516B1 (de) | Vorrichtung und verfahren zum erzeugen eines tieftonkanals | |
| DE19634155B4 (de) | Verfahren zur Simulation der akustischen Qualität eines Raumes und damit verbundener Audio-Digitaler Prozessor | |
| DE69726262T2 (de) | Tonaufnahme- und -wiedergabesysteme | |
| DE69533973T2 (de) | Schallfeldkontrollegerät und Kontrolleverfahren | |
| EP3005732B1 (de) | Vorrichtung und verfahren zur raumselektiven audiowiedergabe | |
| EP3044972B1 (de) | Vorrichtung, verfahren und computerprogramm zur dekorrelation von lautsprechersignalen | |
| EP1872620B9 (de) | Vorrichtung und verfahren zum steuern einer mehrzahl von lautsprechern mittels einer graphischen benutzerschnittstelle | |
| EP1782658B1 (de) | Vorrichtung und verfahren zum ansteuern einer mehrzahl von lautsprechern mittels eines dsp | |
| WO2004103024A1 (de) | Vorrichtung zum pegel-korrigieren in einem wellenfeldsynthesesystem | |
| DE102018120804B4 (de) | Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur automatischen Konfiguration eines Audio-Ausgabesystems und nichtflüchtiges Speichermedium | |
| EP2754151B1 (de) | Vorrichtung, verfahren und elektroakustisches system zur nachhallzeitverlängerung | |
| DE102021103210A1 (de) | Surround-Sound-Wiedergabe basierend auf Raumakustik | |
| EP4367899B1 (de) | Verfahren und vorrichtung zur beschallung mindestens eines publikumsbereiches | |
| EP3058762A2 (de) | Verfahren zum betreiben einer anordnung aus schallwandlern nach dem prinzip der wellenfeldsynthese | |
| DE102019135690B4 (de) | Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Audiosignalverarbeitung für binaurale Virtualisierung | |
| DE102005001395B4 (de) | Verfahren und Vorrichtung zur Transformation des frühen Schallfeldes | |
| WO2024099733A1 (de) | Verfahren zur richtungsabhängigen korrektur des frequenzganges von schallwellenfronten | |
| EP2503799B1 (de) | Verfahren und System zur Berechnung synthetischer Außenohrübertragungsfunktionen durch virtuelle lokale Schallfeldsynthese | |
| AT413010B (de) | Vorrichtung zur herleitung von räumlichen schallsignalen | |
| DE102024000725A1 (de) | Virtuelle akustische Reflektoren | |
| DE102018216604A1 (de) | System zur Übertragung von Schall in den und aus dem Kopf eines Hörers unter Verwendung eines virtuellen akustischen Systems |
Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 121 | Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application |
Ref document number: 23800753 Country of ref document: EP Kind code of ref document: A1 |
|
| DPE1 | Request for preliminary examination filed after expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed from 20040101) | ||
| WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: P2025-01370 Country of ref document: AE |
|
| ENP | Entry into the national phase |
Ref document number: 2025526469 Country of ref document: JP Kind code of ref document: A |
|
| WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 2025526469 Country of ref document: JP |
|
| WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 202380081686.9 Country of ref document: CN |
|
| WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 2023800753 Country of ref document: EP |
|
| NENP | Non-entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: DE |
|
| ENP | Entry into the national phase |
Ref document number: 2023800753 Country of ref document: EP Effective date: 20250610 |
|
| WWP | Wipo information: published in national office |
Ref document number: 202380081686.9 Country of ref document: CN |
|
| WWP | Wipo information: published in national office |
Ref document number: 1020257017167 Country of ref document: KR |
|
| WWP | Wipo information: published in national office |
Ref document number: 2023800753 Country of ref document: EP |