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loudspeaker |
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loudspeakerElectromechanical device that converts electrical signals into sound waves, which are radiated into the air. The most common type of loudspeaker is the moving-coil speaker. Electrical signals from, for example, a radio are fed to a coil of fine wire wound around the top of a cone. The coil is positioned between the poles of a permanent magnet. When signals pass through it, the coil becomes an electromagnet, experiencing a force at right angles to the direction of the current and magnetic field, causing the coil to move. As the signal varies, the coil and the cone vibrate, setting up sound waves. If the electrical signals have a frequency of 2,000 hertz (Hz), sound with a frequency of 2,000 Hz is produced. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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He resorts to a few old-school pranks on members of Congress--reading the Patriot Act from an ice cream wagon's loudspeaker system for the benefit of those who didn't read the bill before voting on it, trying to get them to enlist their children in the military--but those playful methods give way to pure grief and fury when the costs of war snap into focus. The developers also had a security system installed with 32 digital surveillance cameras and a loudspeaker system. In 1981, Siedle presented the first modular loudspeaker system. |
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