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・ Dampierre-les-Bois
・ Dampierre-lès-Conflans
・ Dampierre-Saint-Nicolas
・ Dampierre-sous-Bouhy
・ Dampierre-sous-Brou
・ Dampierre-sur-Avre
・ Dampierre-sur-Boutonne
・ Dampierre-sur-le-Doubs
・ Dampierre-sur-Linotte
・ Dampierre-sur-Moivre
・ Dampierre-sur-Salon
・ Dampilasan River
・ Damping
・ Damping (music)
・ Damping capacity
Damping factor
・ Damping matrix
・ Damping off
・ Damping ratio
・ Damping torque
・ Dampjoux
・ Dampleux
・ Dampmart
・ Dampniat
・ Dampoort
・ Dampoort (Ghent)
・ Dampremy
・ Dampremy (Charleroi Metro)
・ Damprichard
・ Dampskibsselskabet Torm


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Damping factor : ウィキペディア英語版
Damping factor
:''The term damping factor can also refer to the damping ratio in any damped oscillatory system or in numerical algorithms.
In an audio system, the damping factor gives the ratio of the rated impedance of the loudspeaker to the source impedance. Only the resistive part of the loudspeaker impedance is used. The amplifier output impedance is also assumed to be totally resistive. The source impedance (that seen by the loudspeaker) includes the connecting cable impedance.
The load impedance Z_\mathrm (input impedance) and the source impedance Z_\mathrm (output impedance) are shown in the diagram.
The damping factor DF is:
:
DF = \frac} \,

Solving for Z_\mathrm:
:
Z_\mathrm = \frac \,

== Explanation ==
In loudspeaker systems, the value of the damping factor between a particular loudspeaker and a particular amplifier describes the ability of the amplifier to control undesirable movement of the speaker cone near the resonant frequency of the speaker system. It is usually used in the context of low-frequency driver behavior, and especially so in the case of electrodynamic drivers, which use a magnetic motor to generate the forces which move the diaphragm.
Speaker diaphragms have mass, and their surroundings have stiffness. Together, these form a resonant system, and the mechanical cone resonance may be excited by electrical signals (e.g., pulses) at audio frequencies. But a driver with a voice coil is also a current generator, since it has a coil attached to the cone and suspension, and that coil is immersed in a magnetic field. For every motion the coil makes, it will generate a current that will be seen by any electrically attached equipment, such as an amplifier. In fact, the amp's output circuitry will be the main electrical load on the "voice coil current generator". If that load has low resistance, the current will be larger and the voice coil will be more strongly forced to decelerate. A high damping factor (which requires low output impedance at the amplifier output) very rapidly damps unwanted cone movements induced by the mechanical resonance of the speaker, acting as the equivalent of a "brake" on the voice coil motion (just as a short circuit across the terminals of a rotary electrical generator will make it very hard to turn). It is generally (though not universally) thought that tighter control of voice coil motion is desirable, as it is believed to contribute to better-quality sound.
A high damping factor indicates that an amplifier will have greater control over the movement of the speaker cone, particularly in the bass region near the resonant frequency of the driver's mechanical resonance. However, the damping factor at any particular frequency will vary, since driver voice coils are complex impedances whose values vary with frequency. In addition, the electrical characteristics of every voice coil will change with temperature; high power levels will increase coil temperature, and thus resistance. And finally, passive crossovers (made of relatively large inductors, capacitors, and resistors) are between the amplifier and speaker drivers and also affect the damping factor, again in a way that varies with frequency.
For audio power amplifiers, this source impedance Z_\mathrm (also: output impedance) is generally smaller than 0.1 ohm (Ω), and from the point of view of the driver voice coil, is a near short-circuit.
The loudspeaker's load impedance (input impedance) of Z_\mathrm is usually around 4 to 8Ω, although other impedance speakers are available, sometimes as low as 1Ω.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Damping factor」の詳細全文を読む



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