An approximate theoretical relationship has been developed for the transmission of sound between two reverberant rooms through a connecting rectangular slot of finite depth. The theory makes use of impedance functions of rigid weightless rectangular pistons and assumes plane wave propagation through the slots. Slots having aspect ratios of 1, 2, 4 and 8, and depths of 12 in., were tested between two 1750‐ft3 reverberation chambers. Three different slots for each aspect ratio were tested, and the slot dimensions were so chosen as to have the cross‐sectional areas π/4, π, and 4π in.2 in each case to compare with previously published results on circular apertures having these areas. Numerical solutions on a digital computer are compared with the experimental results and the agreement found to be excellent over the range of the parameter, wavenumber times equivalent radius of a circular section having the same area as the rectangular section, from 0.1 to 3.2. [This research supported in part by the National Science Foundation.]
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July 1968
Article Contents
July 01 1968
Sound Transmission through Rectangular Slots of Finite Depth between Reverberant Rooms Free
August Sauter, Jr.;
August Sauter, Jr.
RINK Corporation, Hazelton, Pennsylvania
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Walter W. Soroka
Walter W. Soroka
University of California, Berkeley, California
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August Sauter, Jr.
RINK Corporation, Hazelton, Pennsylvania
Walter W. Soroka
University of California, Berkeley, California
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 44, 359 (1968)
Citation
August Sauter, Walter W. Soroka; Sound Transmission through Rectangular Slots of Finite Depth between Reverberant Rooms. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 July 1968; 44 (1_Supplement): 359. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1970289
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