smiles Posted August 25, 2008 Posted August 25, 2008 Could you tell me the principle of these vibrations, what they depend on Thanks so much !!!
Externet Posted August 25, 2008 Posted August 25, 2008 As shown on the picture, it is a goofy audio analyzer that analyzes nothing as shows no vertical nor horizontal scales. It is supposed to tell the frequencies and the signal level on each, plus peaks reached.
Pete Posted August 25, 2008 Posted August 25, 2008 Could you tell me the principle of these vibrations, what they depend on Thanks so much !!! The photograph you have provided shows a bar graph. Each bar corresponds to a representative frequency in a given frequency range. The height of the bar usually represents the decible level of the sound of the signals in that frequency range. Pete
big314mp Posted August 26, 2008 Posted August 26, 2008 The little white line shows the highest peak, in each frequency range, in the previous few seconds of audio. If you made audio files of various test tones at different frequencies, you could play them and then try and correlate the bars to a given frequency range
smiles Posted August 28, 2008 Author Posted August 28, 2008 If you know, please tell me how to set up convention for these vertical bar 's operation ? Thanks !!!
Mike Dubbeld Posted August 31, 2008 Posted August 31, 2008 If you can do a little calculus see Who is Fourier - a book that goes into great detail on FFT Spectrum analyzers which is very easy to read with lots of simple illustrations piecing it together with the equations used to produce the a graph of any sound. The size of the bars are the Fourier coefficients for that component of sine wave frequencies associated with spectrum of frequencies.
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