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I saw this TED talk and I am curious as to how the sound is focused on the general level. Can anyone explain this or does anyone have any good articles?

Casebash
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    It's worth noting that what he is doing is not sound focusing. He is creating audible sound from high frequency unaudible sound through acoustic non-linear process. An optical similar phenomenon called four-wave mixing does the same. – Bernardo Kyotoku Nov 24 '10 at 11:30

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I don't think anyone here has really answered your question. In this case, the sound is "focused" using phased arrays. The face of the audio spotlight has multiple transducers:

audio spotlight close-up Flickr

The same signal is output from each of them, but delayed slightly by different amounts, so that the wavefronts all reach the same point in front of the device at the same time. This "virtual focus" is called beamforming.

phased array beam steering and focusing ref phased-array principles ref

This is how modern radars focus their beams, too. Instead of spinning a satellite dish around, they have lots of little elements that don't move, but the signals are delayed to produce different beam shapes.

alt textalt text

endolith
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  • That's actually diffraction, not focusing. – ptomato Dec 01 '10 at 09:02
  • Diffraction? Are you thinking of a two-slit experiment? – endolith Dec 01 '10 at 14:36
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    @ptomato- the individual beams diffract as any beam would... but the effect of introducing a variable phase delay between the beams to create a new wavefront is analogous to a wavefront passing through a lens, acquiring phase shift according to the length of each pass – Pete Dec 10 '10 at 05:20
  • each pass (typo)--> each path – Pete Dec 11 '10 at 04:25
  • Hi, is it true that the "point" it focuses on can be arbitrarily small (much smaller than the wavelength itself?)

    Also, I was wondering: If all the waves are sine waves, will the result super-focused wave at the focal point also be a sine wave (same shape), or will it be a modified shape with the same frequency? (I can see intuitively it would obviously be the same frequency, but not sure about the shape of the graph of how the amplitude at that focal point will go up and down)

    – pete Dec 29 '14 at 09:30
  • AHA but even if the shape is wrong, the shapes of all the constituent waves (the emitters) can be modified using advanced signal processing or math, such that they do indeed sum to a perfectly shaped "sine wave" (or whatever shape you want) at the end result of the focal point. I answered my own question but I don't know the math behind it. – pete Dec 29 '14 at 09:34
  • @pete: I don't know about focusing on a point smaller than the wavelength. As for changing the shape of the waveform (which would be nonlinear distortion), it would not happen at low amplitudes, since air pressure waveforms just add together linearly. But I believe it is intentionally distorted at high amplitudes in the "audio spotlights", using the high pressure at the focal point combined with the nonlinearity of the air to demodulate ultrasound into audible frequencies. – endolith Dec 30 '14 at 01:13
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Sound is a type of wave, so it has all the wave properties similar to other waves such as light waves. For light waves, you can use a lens to focus the light. A lens has higher refractive index, or lower light speed than the environment. The same is true for sound wave, so what you need is to make a high refractive region [1].

The air surrounding us can be approximated by the ideal gas, so the speed of sound is [2]

$c=\sqrt{\gamma\frac{P}{\rho}}$

where $\gamma$ is the adiabatic index, $p$ is pressure of the air, $\rho$ is density of the air

Here, we want to create a region with high refractive, or equivalently low sound speed. There are few way to achieve this, one is to decrease the pressure, another way is to decrease the temperature (by the ideal gas law $PV=NRT$). However, in both cases, you either need a hard container or a refrigerator near it to keep it cold.

On the other hand, increasing the density can be easily done by using a heavy gas such as carbon dioxide. You just need to fill the gas in a balloon and it can act as a very simple acoustic lens. Note that the size of the balloon or other container must be large compared with the wavelength. There are also other methods to focus sound without using lens. [3]

As said before, the same mechanism can be applied for other wave, for example, a water wave. In a shallow water tank, adding a lens shape obstacle at the bottom can converge water wave because water wave move slowly at the shallow region. This experiment can be easily performed in one's home.

[1] http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/sound/refrac.html

[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_sound#Speed_in_ideal_gases_and_in_air

[3] http://focus.aps.org/story/v14/st3

endolith
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unsym
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These ‘audio spotlights’ work by emitting ultrasound at two different frequencies; it is the short wavelength of the ultrasound that causes the beam to be so directed. The two waves interfere and produce sum and different tones at frequencies of $f_1+f_2$ and $f_1-f_2$; if the ultrasound frequencies are, say, $f_1=45\,$kHz and $f_2=44\,$kHz, the difference tone will be at $1$kHz which is in the audible range for humans.

I knew some people who looked at using audio spotlights for noise control some time ago, but (IIRC) the general consensus is that since you're subjecting your victims with very large amounts of ultrasonic noise (greater than 100dB), these devices are probably not too safe for continuous use. (Or, at least, their safety was in no way assured.)

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On the general level, you focus sound the same way you focus light -- either by reflecting it from a parabolic surface, or letting it pass through an acoustic lens. An acoustic lens is just like an optical lens in that it consists of a material with a different propagation speed of sound, with varying thickness. See the Wikipedia article on acoustic mirrors.

ptomato
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Sound is a wave just like light is a wave. You can use a parabolic shape reflector with a speaker at the vocal point to transmit sound in a "pencil beam".

steveK
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