Lossary, Udio, Erms – MartinLogan 20 User Manual

Page 11

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Glossary of Audio Terms 11

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AC .

Abbreviation for alternating current.

Active crossover .

Uses active devices (transistors, ICs,

tubes) and some form of power supply to operate.

Amplitude .

The extreme range of a signal. Usually mea-

sured from the average to the extreme.


Arc .

The visible sparks generated by an electrical dis-

charge.

ATF .

The abbreviation for advanced thin film.


Bass .

The lowest frequencies of sound.


Bi-Amplification .

Uses an electronic crossover, or line-

level passive crossover, and separate power amplifiers for
the high and low frequency loudspeaker drivers.

Capacitance .

That property of a capacitor which determines

how much charge can be stored in it for a given potential
difference between its terminals, measured in farads, by
the ratio of the charge stored to the potential difference.

Capacitor .

A device consisting of two or more conducting

plates separated from one another by an insulating mate-
rial and used for storing an electrical charge. Sometimes
called a condenser.


Clipping .

Distortion of a signal by its being chopped

off. An overload problem caused by pushing an ampli-
fier beyond its capabilities. The flat-topped signal has
high levels of harmonic distortion which creates heat in a
loudspeaker and is the major cause of loudspeaker com-
ponent failure.

CLS .

The abbreviation for curvilinear line source.


Crossover .

An electrical circuit that divides a full band-

width signal into the desired frequency bands for the
loudspeaker components.


dB (decibel) .

A numerical expression of the relative loud-

ness of a sound. The difference in decibels between two
sounds is ten times the Base 10 logarithm of the ratio of
their power levels.

DC .

Abbreviation for direct current.

Diffraction .

The breaking up of a sound wave caused by

some type of mechanical interference such as a cabinet
edge, grill frame or other similar object.


Diaphragm .

A thin flexible membrane or cone that vibrates

in response to electrical signals to produce sound waves.


Distortion . Usually referred to in terms of total harmonic

distortion (THD) which is the percentage of unwanted har-
monics of the drive signal present with the wanted signal.
Generally used to mean any unwanted change introduced
by the device under question.


Driver .

See transducer.


Dynamic Range .

The range between the quietest and the

loudest sounds a device can handle (often quoted in dB).


Efficiency .

The acoustic power delivered for a given elec-

trical input. Often expressed as decibels/watt/meter
(dB/w/m).


ESL .

The abbreviation for electrostatic loudspeaker.


Headroom .

The difference, in decibels, between the peak

and RMS levels in program material.


Hybrid .

A product created by the marriage of two different

technologies. Meant here as the combination of a dynam-
ic woofer with an electrostatic or ATF transducer.


Hz (Hertz) .

Unit of frequency equivalent to the number of

cycles per second.


Imaging .

To make a representation or imitation of the

original sonic event.

Impedance .

The total opposition offered by an electric

circuit to the flow of an alternating current of a single fre-
quency. It is a combination of resistance and reactance and
is measured in ohms. Remember that a speaker’s imped-
ance changes with frequency, it is not a constant value.

Inductance .

The property of an electrical circuit by which

a varying current in it produces a varying magnetic field
that introduces voltages in the same circuit or in a nearby
circuit. It is measured in henrys.

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