File:Weighting curves.png
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Acoustic weighting curves A, B, C, and D, usually used in acoustic measurements to approximate the human hearing response. (A and C are by far the most popular.)
Instructions
[edit]See Wikipedia graph-making tips.
Generated in gnuplot with the following script (after a lot of trial and error):
To convert the PostScript file to PNG:
- Open it in the GIMP (make sure you have ghostscript installed! - Windows instructions)
- Enter 500 under Resolution (it doesn't say "DPI" but I think that's what it means)
- Uncheck Try bounding box (since the bounding box cuts off the edge, unfortunately. You can try with the bounding box first.)
- Enter large values for Width and Height
- Check Color
- Check Strong anti-aliasing for both graphics and text
- Crop off extra whitespace (Shift+C if you can't find it in the toolbox)
- Possibly need to rotate it: Click Image → Transform → Rotate 90 degrees clockwise
Filters → Blur → Gaussian blur at 2.0 px(No need to blur if you use strong anti-aliasing during conversion. I see no significant difference between end results.)- Image → Scale Image...
- Width and Height at 25%
- Cubic interpolation
- You can view at normal size if you want by pressing 1, Ctrl+E
- Save as Weighting curves.png
Functions are from the weighting filter article (which in turn are from a website). Normalizing constants were determined in Maxima from something like this:
kA*s**4 / ((s+129.4)**2 * (s+676.7) * (s+4636) * (s+76655)**2); ev(%,s=%I*2*%PI*f); abs(%); ev(%,f=1000); solve(%=1,kA); float(%);
or just
float(solve(ev(abs(ev(%,s=%I*2*%PI*f)),f=1000)=1,kA));
It might look a little better if the range of the D curve were limited, as in http://www.extron.com/technology/img/loudnesscontrol_ts_3-lg.jpg
Created by User:Omegatron using gnuplot, possibly with post-processing in the GIMP (PNG) or Inkscape (SVG)
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Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue |
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File history
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 20:42, 1 July 2005 | 1,600 × 1,600 (212 KB) | Omegatron (talk | contribs) | Acoustic weighting curves A, B, C, and D, usually used in acoustic measurements to approximate the human hearing response. (A and C are by far the most popular.) Source: Created by User:Omegatron {{SelfBSA}} |
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