jltfromtheb
New member
Imagine there's a chamber and sound from the exterior is hitting it. The chamber makes the signal of this sound reverberate but doesn't bother doing the same with noise. With noise all it does is reverberate at a much smaller intensity. Is there a technical term for this type of reverberation, because as far as I understand right now, this wouldn't be reverberation, as reverberation would also reverberate at the same intensity with the noise, not just the signal, as it would copy the sound in its decay all the way into silence, with the same energy as the external sound.
Now imagine this chamber were reverberating excessively to signal just like I describe in the previous paragraph, but that the difference from between when it didn't do this and to how it does so now is that now it is now in a state of permanent low-frequency vibration, whereas before it was silent. Would this new vibration be a factor in why this chamber is now behaving like this when hit by external sound? Would this vibration accompany in this manner- with an obsession with signal over noise- the external sound, with a low frequency coat? And if so, what would be the technical term for this process, where an external sound gets its signals coated by going through a noisy chamber tunnel?
Now imagine this chamber were reverberating excessively to signal just like I describe in the previous paragraph, but that the difference from between when it didn't do this and to how it does so now is that now it is now in a state of permanent low-frequency vibration, whereas before it was silent. Would this new vibration be a factor in why this chamber is now behaving like this when hit by external sound? Would this vibration accompany in this manner- with an obsession with signal over noise- the external sound, with a low frequency coat? And if so, what would be the technical term for this process, where an external sound gets its signals coated by going through a noisy chamber tunnel?
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