mkoijn
Structural
- Jan 7, 2003
- 28
I'm trying to measure the sound radiation of a cello by tapping the cello bridge with an impact hammer mounted on a pendulum, in the same direction it would be bowed and measuring the response with a microphone. My question is, how far must I place the microphone away from the cello to be sure I am in the far field? If I place the microphone too far away from the cello the signal becomes weak in relation to the effect of the modes of the room I'm working in (I can't afford an anechoic chamber)and you can only hit the cello bridge very lightly before damage occurs. Is it possible to calculate where the near field stops and the far field starts?, the first mode that lies in the playing range of a cello that has large amplitudes of in and out of phase components (and therefore canceling out effects in the radiated energy because this mode is well below the critical frequency) occurs at approximately 150 Hz, so the wavelength in room teperature air is around 2.25 meters for that frequency. The length of the cello body is approximately 74 cm. Is this enough information to calculate near field far field distances or do I have to buy an intensity probe and map the particle velocity vectors? A colleague of ours is measuring at a distance of 0.5 meters from the cello, but I think at that distance he could still be in the region where canceling effects due to in and out of phase components are occuring. ( but I'm not sure!) Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Best regards
finnigan
Best regards
finnigan