Sound exposure
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sound exposure is the integral, over time, of squared sound pressure. The SI unit of sound exposure is the pascal squared second (Pa2·s).
| Sound measurements | |
|---|---|
Characteristic | Symbols |
| Sound pressure | p, SPL, LPA |
| Particle velocity | v, SVL |
| Particle displacement | δ |
| Sound intensity | I, SIL |
| Sound power | P, SWL, LWA |
| Sound energy | W |
| Sound energy density | w |
| Sound exposure | E, SEL |
| Acoustic impedance | Z |
| Audio frequency | AF |
| Transmission loss | TL |
Mathematical definition
Sound exposure, denoted E, is defined by
where
- the exposure is being calculated for the time interval between times t0 and t1;
- p(t) is the sound pressure at time t, usually A-weighted for sound in air.
Sound exposure level
Sound exposure level (SEL) is a logarithmic measure of the sound exposure of a sound relative to a reference value.
Sound exposure level, denoted LE and measured in dB, is defined by[1]
where
- E is the sound exposure;
- E0 is the reference sound exposure;
- 1 Np = 1 is the neper;
- 1 B = 1/2 ln 10 is the bel;
- 1 dB = 1/20 ln 10 is the decibel.
The commonly used reference sound exposure in air is[2]
The proper notations for sound exposure level using this reference are LW/(400 μPa2⋅s) or LW (re 400 μPa2⋅s), but the notations dB SEL, dB(SEL), dBSEL, or dBSEL are very common, even if they are not accepted by the SI.[3]