So who wants to make one of these?

XCore Project reviews, ideas, videos and proposals.
User avatar
lilltroll
XCore Expert
Posts: 956
Joined: Fri Dec 11, 2009 3:53 am
Location: Sweden, Eskilstuna

Post by lilltroll »

ottivo:

Please correct me if I'm misstaken but,

The directivity factor, or the "narrowness" of the beam is dependent of the wavelength for a given geometry.

Once upon a time, we had a carrierfreq. and a baseband-signal for radio where the bandwidth of the baseband-signal << carrier-frequency and we used FM/AM modulation, thus the beam had about the same directivity over the used frequency band for the radio transmission and everything worked fine.

For microphones you solved the problem with shoot-gun microphones like this to create acoustic delay-lines.
Image
But the penalty of such construction in general is the frequency response and the frequrncy dependent directivity factor.

For Audio we would like to have a microphone that covers 20Hz-20kHz, at least for human speech we need to cover the voice-formants 300-3800 Hz + the consonants, thus 300 Hz- 8 kHz.
If we now try to create a "zoom"-microphone we get the problem with the directivity since the frequency covers over one decade.
A solution to achieve a beam with a frequency-independent narrowness, and a final result that has a flat frequency response, is to apply a filter-function to each signal prior addition - and in the end make a compensation with a filter if necessary.

Simpe array-antennes for EM. could be used a long time ago, since it was simple to construct a short-time delay-paths, and the bandwidth of the baseband was very narrow.


Probably not the most confused programmer anymore on the XCORE forum.
User avatar
otitov
XCore Addict
Posts: 207
Joined: Thu Dec 10, 2009 11:00 pm
Location: Mexico

Post by otitov »

lilltroll wrote:...

bandwidth of the baseband was very narrow.
very good point! audible signal is quite wide in this sense.

edit1: quote code inserted wrong reference
CraigD
New User
Posts: 3
Joined: Mon Dec 14, 2009 9:56 pm

Post by CraigD »

I was aware of phased array sound generation almost 30 years ago. A company near where I was working had some systems. It was a spin-off from the sound system they had on the helicopters in 'Nam (See Apocalypse Now). Also check out http://www.farsounder.com/ for a 10x10 sonar array.