When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Spill (audio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spill_(audio)

    Spill occurs when sound is detected by a microphone not intended to pick it up (for example, the vocals being detected by the microphone for the guitar). [3] Spill is often undesirable in popular music recording, [4] as the combined signals during the mix process can cause phase cancellation and may cause difficulty in processing individual tracks. [2]

  3. Covert listening device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covert_listening_device

    A laser microphone can be used to reconstruct audio from a laser beam shot onto an object in a room, or the glass pane of a window. Researchers have also prototyped a method for reconstructing audio from video of thin objects that can pick up sound vibrations, such as a houseplant or bag of potato chips. [18]

  4. Microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphone

    Contact microphones have been used to pick up the sound of a snail's heartbeat and the footsteps of ants. A portable version of this microphone has recently been developed. A throat microphone is a variant of the contact microphone that picks up speech directly from a person's throat, which it is strapped to. This lets the device be used in ...

  5. Soundfield microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundfield_microphone

    The Soundfield microphone is an audio microphone composed of four closely spaced subcardioid or cardioid (unidirectional) microphone capsules arranged in a tetrahedron. It was invented by Michael Gerzon and Peter Craven, and is a part of, but not exclusive to, Ambisonics, a surround sound technology. It can function as a mono, stereo or ...

  6. Ribbon microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribbon_microphone

    A ribbon microphone, also known as a ribbon velocity microphone, is a type of microphone that uses a thin aluminum, duraluminum or nanofilm of electrically conductive ribbon placed between the poles of a magnet to produce a voltage by electromagnetic induction. Ribbon microphones are typically bidirectional, meaning that they pick up sounds ...

  7. Contact microphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_microphone

    A contact microphone is a form of microphone that senses audio vibrations through contact with solid objects. [1] Unlike normal air microphones, contact microphones are almost completely insensitive to air vibrations but transduce only structure-borne sound.

  8. Pickup (music technology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickup_(music_technology)

    By picking up a larger portion of the vibrating string, more lower harmonics are present in the signal produced by the pickup in relation to high harmonics, resulting in a "fatter" tone. Humbucking pickups in the narrow form factor of a single coil, designed to replace single-coil pickups, have the narrower aperture resembling that of a single ...

  9. Headphones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headphones

    Active noise-cancelling headphones use a microphone, amplifier, and speaker to pick up, amplify, and play ambient noise in phase-reversed form; this to some extent cancels out unwanted noise from the environment without affecting the desired sound source, which is not picked up and reversed by the microphone. They require a power source ...