On 01/19/2018 08:04 PM, Gary Gallagher wrote:
Wave field synthesis wall paper? How small does an an audio pixel have to
be?


The question is more like "how big can you make it?". An audio "pixel" of a square millimetre cannot produce meaningful audio frequencies if suspended in mid-air without a baffle, you would have to get somewhat close to the wavelength. So no million-channel audio interfaces either, I guess the approach would be to use lots of those pixels in unison. How you ensure good airtight coupling between them is one question, and the other is how much excursion you can get.

Thiele-Small parameters for silicon cavities, anyone? :-D

It's quite a moonshot actually, and if you start thinking about the complexities, that carbon nanosheet paper that came from China a few years back doesn't sound soo far-fetched anymore, where people were producing sound by heating surfaces with an extremely good heat conductivity (so its thermal cycles can be at audio frequencies). Problem there is 100% k2, as it's effectively a half-wave rectifier...


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