What is Sound?

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2020
  • How the Fourier Transform Works, Lecture 2 | What is Sound?
    Next Episode: bit.ly/3sWskGI
    Course playlist: bit.ly/2WyzWD4
    howthefouriertransformworks.com/
    View the whole series at: • Understand the Fourier...
    Now we begin our journey into the actual maths of the Fourier Transform. Throughout the course, we'll be using sound to demonstrate one of the many uses of Fourier's theory, so in this lecture, we look at what sound actually is, how Fourier's theory applies to sound, and we even get to see a sound wave propagating through the air.
    This is the fourth in this series of videos which take a new and visual look at the maths behind the magic of how the Fourier Transform works.
    Please help me finish filming the course by supporting me on Patreon: www.patreon.com/MarkNewman
    A transcript of this lecture can be downloaded from the following link:
    drive.google.com/file/d/1sb2B...
    Click below to subscribe to the Course's mailing list to receive an update when the next video is available, updates about the course's production, and a notification of when the full course is available to purchase.
    eepurl.com/dwgO7D
    #learning #math #tutorial
    Thanks for watching the video How the Fourier Transform Works, Lecture 2 | What is Sound?

Komentáře • 90

  • @potatochip190
    @potatochip190 Před rokem +1

    I really love your way in applying the formula right away in producing sound, which ofcourse means you've understood this formula very well! Thank you so much sir

  • @michaelt126
    @michaelt126 Před 3 lety +1

    man this series has been so good so far. i get so used to the videos that just quickly show me how to do calculations and look up tables but i love how thorough this is without feeling like im sitting through a boring lecture

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you for your kind words. There is more to come. I am scripting further videos as we speak. Sorry the work is slow, they take ages to produce. However, it is a labor of love.

  • @bayho8944
    @bayho8944 Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent, excellent, excellent

  • @estebanlluisaceff4864
    @estebanlluisaceff4864 Před 4 lety +1

    You are doing a great job, I am a mathematician, I am making a research in representation theory and harmonical analysis and I have seen lots of books and videos on this subject, but you are one of the few who has helped me to really understand the interpretation behind the mathematics. You are blessed with the ability and the passion to explain this. Please, keep doing more videos, they are really inspiring to enter to this beautiful area of knowledge.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks so much. Best of luck with your research. If it helps, today I published lecture #3 on phase: czcams.com/video/n7hvhRdDg5g/video.html

  • @andyudvardy6079
    @andyudvardy6079 Před 4 lety +2

    Great stuff! I’ve been looking for videos like this. You take the concepts that are usually in basic form and expand them to the next level without losing your audience. I’m a musician, composer and a scientist.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety

      So interesting that you site "musician" amongst what you do. I too am a musician, which is one of the reasons the sound applications of Fourier's theories interest me so much. By the way, lecture #3 on phase is also online now: czcams.com/video/n7hvhRdDg5g/video.html. Interestingly, although our ears are very sensitive to amplitude and frequency, they are not so sensitive to phase as I explain, whilst sat by my piano in the video.

  • @larssteinberg2050
    @larssteinberg2050 Před 3 lety +1

    This is awsome! I am so pleased to have come across your videos. Thanks for imparting such valuable knowledge, for FREE! BIG UP!!

  • @2002budokan
    @2002budokan Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you Mark, your channel is a gem.

  • @mnzubyk
    @mnzubyk Před 3 lety +1

    Mark, this is a truly phenomenal series of videos. Thank you for taking the time to create and share them with the world.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 3 lety

      My pleasure. Please let me know if I can answer any questions or if there is anything else you are interested in me producing.

  • @thecrazymoon6578
    @thecrazymoon6578 Před 4 měsíci

    This is great and very well produced! Thank you!

  • @akbarravan5604
    @akbarravan5604 Před 5 měsíci

    I don’t know how I should THANK you for this great content ❤
    Please continue your lectures

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 měsíci

      Thank you for your kind words. New content out today. Check out: czcams.com/video/tjYMprOD3GI/video.html

  • @acluster3411
    @acluster3411 Před rokem

    Very thoughtful and well articulated explanation of wave and signal.

  • @sammyapsel1443
    @sammyapsel1443 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome video! From an EE student at the Technion :)

  • @minispot8134
    @minispot8134 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much sir
    I really appreciate your efforts and I really hope there will be more informative videos like this

  • @GigaMarou
    @GigaMarou Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for this great video. The displacement of the ball is missleading though, because sound waves are density waves.

  • @babloovyas1080
    @babloovyas1080 Před 2 lety

    One word "incredible"
    for this explanation

  • @tejaswinig9968
    @tejaswinig9968 Před 3 lety

    thank you so much sir , im so blessed to find ur videos . Now i can understand signals better than ever before and all thanks to you . please do uplode more of such amazing visualising videos on this subject . thanks a lot again.

  • @ngophuthanh
    @ngophuthanh Před rokem

    I wished we could learn this way back in my school time (long time ago). Thank you so much.

  • @JP-xm3qf
    @JP-xm3qf Před 10 měsíci

    You sir are a genius!, thank you so much!, you have some of the best videos I have ever seen, finally understanding the meaning behind such complex subjects often explained in the worst way possible.

  • @muhammadmansoob4344
    @muhammadmansoob4344 Před 8 měsíci

    Great work

  • @siimseiin
    @siimseiin Před 4 lety +1

    Great video, thank you so much for making it!

  • @chrisgalati855
    @chrisgalati855 Před 4 lety

    Ditto on on all the praise for this work Mark. I too, was an engineering student decades ago that struggled with this subject and I drop everything to watch the next episode. I just want to make sure (for my own sanity check) that at 6:06, while you are plotting change in amplitude, that you are simultaneously changing both the volume (amplitude) and frequency.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety

      Yes... Indeed. I am changing both the amplitude and the frequency. Hopefully you can hear that in the audio too, but I've noticed on my laptop, for example, that its sound card has some sort of compressor in it making everything come out at the same volume... So depending on what you're listening to the video on, it might not be obvious. Glad you like the lectures. Lecture #3 is undergoing final editing as we speak and should be available by 21st June.

  • @__________hugo
    @__________hugo Před měsícem

    So clear, thank you very much

  • @hammadullahshaikh4735
    @hammadullahshaikh4735 Před 9 měsíci

    Great Information..... ❤

  • @curtpiazza1688
    @curtpiazza1688 Před rokem

    I enjoyed this! Thanx!😊

  • @antarnetra1240
    @antarnetra1240 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks a ton. The part where You add more and more frequencies and then vary amplitude to create music is mind blowing. The simplicity of nature completely revealed. All i need is now to understand the analysis we build upon this simplicity. I want to make a one time contribution but Patron allows only monthly. Please provide a link to Your youtube page where one could also make a one time contribution. Thanks again for this wonderful series.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for your kind words and your generosity. Take a look at the other videos on my channel and see if there is anything there that answers your questions. I have a whole series on Fourier Analysis. If not, please tell me what you like to know. I'm always on the lookout for new ideas for videos to make.
      For a one time donation, please use the following link: paypal.me/MarkHNewmam. Many thanks.

  • @yosoylibre
    @yosoylibre Před 4 lety

    Awesome work. Congratulations!

  • @user-ks2ry2kc3s
    @user-ks2ry2kc3s Před 4 lety

    Great explaining and visualization

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks. Lecture 3 is now online too: czcams.com/video/n7hvhRdDg5g/video.html

  • @nindergardjason9271
    @nindergardjason9271 Před 3 lety

    Great work!

  • @thermite10k40
    @thermite10k40 Před rokem

    Thank you very much! I am taking a Signals and Systems course and this does help me quite a lot, a great way of presenting this concepts.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před rokem +2

      I'm really glad it was helpful. I've just published the 2nd book in a series I have written on how the Fourier Transform works, using the same teaching style as in these videos. If you think these books could help you with your course, then please head over to howthefouriertransformworks.com/book-launch.html

  • @felipepardosuarez2364
    @felipepardosuarez2364 Před 3 lety

    This is suuuuuper cool!

  • @supremeleader5516
    @supremeleader5516 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Amazing

  • @Kim-cj2ds
    @Kim-cj2ds Před rokem

    clear explanation thanks

  • @markdonovan1540
    @markdonovan1540 Před 3 lety

    This is how digital transmission theory was started. The Fourier Transform, and later the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), was key in being able to process signals for transmission and reception. If only I'd known at the time how important that would eventually become....
    I don't know if you've produced a video on Electro Magnetic Theory yet, Maxwell's Equations etc? It would be great to see your way of teaching the fundamentals and how mathematical functions like DIV, GRAD and CURL are used to explain and model all kinds of field patterns, from electro-magnetism to heat transfer and fluid mechanics. Uff, sorry, too much in one go! But some bite-sized chunks to explain the basics in a visual way would be great.

  • @Deepa_aami
    @Deepa_aami Před 5 měsíci

    Excellent explanation sir.Please do more videos which would be helpful for many

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 5 měsíci +1

      I'm working on it as we speak. 3 new videos coming out towards the end of February and I'll shortly be announcing a chance to grab an early place on my new online course on how the Fourier Transform works.

  • @1RABDI
    @1RABDI Před 4 lety

    Great job 👍

  • @38yetisken
    @38yetisken Před 2 lety

    Great job! We use same method in earthquake engineering to define waves to structures in frequency/period domain.

  • @toms4123
    @toms4123 Před 4 lety

    Excellent, very interesting

  • @DavidBichoHasBeard
    @DavidBichoHasBeard Před 4 lety

    Following this serie like it is Game Of Thrones. Next episode nooow! :)
    You are making a truly amazing job. Keep it up!!!!

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +2

      Thank you! Will certainly try. It just take AGES to make these videos. The 6 lectures I'm releasing at the moment were 3 years in the making. This is a hobby rather than my day job unfortunately.

    • @DavidBichoHasBeard
      @DavidBichoHasBeard Před 4 lety

      @@MarkNewmanEducation All the hard work you put into this is truly amazing. Keep it up!

  • @mondalj7538
    @mondalj7538 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant!!!

  • @shrabaniroy3025
    @shrabaniroy3025 Před 3 lety

    Thanks sir . I am from India.....this is the vedio I really want to see........

  • @athiest100
    @athiest100 Před 2 lety

    This is beautiful

  • @user-gh2ys6jb3u
    @user-gh2ys6jb3u Před rokem

    Let’s say you have a record of a soundwave. If you plot the soundwave as a 3D graph, you can see the direction of the sound and the soundwave itself. Now, imagine that you have a 3D record of a soundwave. If you plot this as a 4D graph, the 4th axis would show the soundwave and the other 3 axes would show the direction of the sound. It’s fascinating to think about!

  • @A_Basic_Maths_Teacher
    @A_Basic_Maths_Teacher Před rokem +1

    Such a great video. Although, I do apologize as I had to play it at 1.25x speed.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před rokem +3

      Thank you. Whatever works for you. That's the beauty of CZcams. For those who I speak too fast, they can slow me down, and for people like you, you can speed me up. Great feature. Well done CZcams.

  • @reneadrianpomies2842
    @reneadrianpomies2842 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks you .. Sos un crack!!! Salût

  • @josterlau1
    @josterlau1 Před 4 lety +1

    I would have loved to have you as a lecturer at University. I want to hear your musical compositions! Are you a mathematician?

    • @felipepardosuarez2364
      @felipepardosuarez2364 Před 3 lety +1

      If he had been my professor at university, my career path might just look very differently!

  • @allilatif1600
    @allilatif1600 Před rokem

    beautiful

  • @scottstensland
    @scottstensland Před 4 lety

    keep in mind the blue bouncing ball buffeted by the sound wave wobbles towards and away from the sound source ( longitudinal wave ) as opposed to a water wave which is a transverse wave

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, I had a little trouble with that animation. In retrospect, the Schlieren image should have been rotated by 90 degrees around the Y-Axis. The idea was that if you think of waves in the sea, the ball would bob up and down on the surface of the water. My problem was I only had a 2-D animation of the sound waves not a 3-D one. Your point is totally valid.

  • @yosoylibre
    @yosoylibre Před 4 lety

    It would be great your work on standing waves.

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety

      Great suggestion! Maybe after I finish working on the Fourier Transform course.

  • @maheiluwang515
    @maheiluwang515 Před 2 lety

    I am v sure they make the Sheldon character from this man ( a compliment ✌️💐)

  • @jairam2788
    @jairam2788 Před 11 měsíci

  • @superdahoho
    @superdahoho Před 4 lety

    but how does the amplitude change as you change the frequency? at around 5:23, you were changing the frequency but the amplitude stayed the same; each cycle at the same height.
    at around 5:28 you changed the amplitude but the frequency did not change. so how can you change the amplitude with respect to frequency at 5:58?

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +1

      You can do whatever you want with the signal. The amplitude and frequency of the signal are completely independent of each other. You can change one without it affecting the other. I used an audio editor called Audacity to generate a sine wave and played with it so that I could demonstrate this. At 5:23 I wanted to show what the signal looks like as you change the frequency. At 5:28 I wanted to show what the signal looks like as you change the amplitude. At 5:58, we are no longer looking at the signal in the time domain, we are looking at it in the frequency domain. At 5:58 I'm changing the frequency only. The amplitude remains constant. Unfortunately, the graph bobs about a little as the software I was using to measure the signal and generate the graph isn't perfect. The height of the peak should be totally still. The peak should only be moving along the x-axis. In the frequency domain, the peak travels to the right along the x-axis as the frequency increases and returns to the left as the frequency decreases. At 6:05 I am changing both the amplitude and the frequency. The peak gets smaller as the amplitude decreases and travels to the right as the frequency increases. Then it grows again as the amplitude increases and moves back to the left as the frequency decreases.
      I hope I understood your question correctly and have answered it satisfactorily.

    • @superdahoho
      @superdahoho Před 4 lety

      @@MarkNewmanEducation
      Oh thank you for the prompt reply, I guess my question wasn't very clear. I wanted to ask about the frequency domain. At 6:05, you were talking the amplitude getting larger and smaller so I thought you were only changing the amplitude, that's why i was thrown off by the wave moving right and left at the say time. I see now from your comment that you were changing both frequency and amplitude, so it makes sense now.
      I have another question about the frequency domain. Given a single frequency sine wave, the amplitude goes from negative max to positive max, but in frequency domain,
      it only shows the positive max. I'm assuming only the magnitude of the amplitude matters in this graph and you don't care about the direction because it's kind of accounted for by the frequency?

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 4 lety +1

      Amplitude is not directional. It is an amount of something, not where that something is going. As you cannot have a negative amount of loudness (the quietest a sound can be is no sound at all), the amplitude is always positive.

  • @legendaryx2k19
    @legendaryx2k19 Před měsícem +1

    5:55 sounds like a siren

  • @lidorshimoni5470
    @lidorshimoni5470 Před 3 lety

    It’s means that in pure vacuum there are no sounds?

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 3 lety

      Indeed. There is nothing to vibrate.

    • @lidorshimoni5470
      @lidorshimoni5470 Před 3 lety

      @@MarkNewmanEducation
      Great video.
      שבוע טוב

    • @lidorshimoni5470
      @lidorshimoni5470 Před 3 lety

      @@MarkNewmanEducation
      To be honest I don’t understand. If there is something that vibrate in vacuum - there is something... any evidence about this theorem?

    • @MarkNewmanEducation
      @MarkNewmanEducation  Před 3 lety

      As far as I know, although I have never been there myself, space is soundless because it is a vacuum. Sound needs some medium to propagate through: gas, water, even solids, but in outer space where there is nothing, sound cannot propagate.

    • @lidorshimoni5470
      @lidorshimoni5470 Před 3 lety

      @@MarkNewmanEducation jajaja
      No one knows the Vaccum. It’s just theory.
      The exist can changed only to nothing. But the nothing is not exists... it’s relating to Zenon’s paradoxes. Like wave-particle duality that also related to this area of paradoxes. Kind of metaphysical arguments as far as I understand it.

  • @manicsurfing
    @manicsurfing Před 2 lety

    sounds are perturbations in the ether.

  • @MAli-yh7gr
    @MAli-yh7gr Před 2 lety

    awesome , but volume is too low , speak loudly