How do noise-canceling headphones work?

Bose

Gracing every spec sheet and advertisement, there’s no doubt that Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) is the hottest feature on every headset. 

Working to, as the name suggests, actively cancel out the ambient noise that interferes with what you hear from the headphones themselves, ANC can be great for locking in and blocking out. 

Noise-canceling earbuds or headphones are a sure way to drown out distraction, but have you ever wondered how they actually work? Are you listening to them or are they listening to you? Read on to learn more about the sound technology behind the silence. 

Also: How to connect Bluetooth headphones to a Mac

Sound waves: Peaks and valleys 

Visualization of sound waves

Getty Images

Before we talk about headphones, let’s start with the nitty-gritty science behind hearing: sound waves. Traveling through the air to our ear, sound waves carry everything from the screeching morning subway to the subtle “click-clack” as we type. 

Like regular waves, sound waves are made up of various peaks and valleys that together make the noise we end up perceiving. 

Sound wave peaks and valleys, when matched with a similar pattern, can amplify sound. An example is when you’re at a concert and everyone is singing the same song at relatively the same pitch, so it sounds like one voice. This phenomenon is often referred to as constructive interference. 

On the flip side, when two sound wave peaks and valleys oppose each other, instead of amplification there’s a net cancellation. This phenomenon is referred to as destructive interference, and the result is silence. That’s where noise-canceling headphones come in. 

Also: The best headphones you can buy right now

How ANC headphones listen to create silence

Now, let’s talk about how ANC headphones use sound waves’ structure to give you peace and quiet. 

Equipped with tiny microphones on either the inside or outside of the headphones’ ear cups, ANC headphones listen to your surroundings as much as you listen to the sound they’re playing. 

When the microphones detect noise, they emit an “anti-noise” sound wave that opposes the incoming wave’s peaks and valleys, so that you are unable to hear the external noise.

how ANC works

Getty Images

This destructive interference is why ambient noise is often cancelled out when you wear ANC headphones even when you don’t play music. 

Where wearing ANC headphones works best

If you’re thinking that it’s seemingly impossible for tiny microphones to pick up and transmit a counterattack on every single disruptive sound wave, you’re correct. Sound still slips through. 

ANC headphones and the overall sound wave cancellation process work best in a consistent environment. Consistent environments include airplanes, subways (minus the conductor speaking), and in a quiet work environment. Plus, some headphones have more effective ANC than others.

Also: The top noise-canceling headphones — and can they protect hearing?

FAQs

Noise-canceling headphones don’t stop sound waves, but emit anti-waves that counter the structure of the intruding sound waves. The opposing peak-and-valley structure of the two waves results in silence. 

Noise canceling, noise masking, and noise blocking all sound like they do pretty much the same thing, but there are differences. Noise canceling uses destructive interference with two opposing sound waves to create silence via built-in microphones. Noise blocking relies on the engineering of the headphone structure itself to cup the ear in a way that prevents sound from getting in. Finally, noise masking emits white noise to reduce ambient sound, hoping to trick your brain into canceling the sound altogether.

Review: Do Soundcore’s Sleep A10 noise-masking earbuds really work?

ANC headphones work best to cancel sound when you’re in a controlled sound environment like a plane or library. Some headphones are also better quality than others and use a stronger microphone to emit more anti-noise waves.

For all the latest Technology News Click Here 

 For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechNewsBoy.com is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.