Anechoic in a sentence as an adjective

I could take a book and go sit in our anechoic chamber for an hour, I guess. If I decide to try it, I'll report back.

In 1951, Cage visited the anechoic chamber at Harvard\n University&;&." I heard two sounds, one high and one low.

I've been in an anechoic chamber and it's not so much the lack of sound but the intense visual shock. You're usually in a room with incredible depth levels, sharp angles and so on.

The semi-anechoic chamber was among the best preserved, located in a small shed on top of a hill. I gained access by gently kicking in a small window near the main door.

I enjoyed my brief visits to a couple of anechoic chambers. The quiet was very relaxing, and the few sounds that were present I could pinpoint precisely without looking.

I've used anechoic chambers of varying quietness for making high-quality voice recordings a handful of times in the last year. I have to say that the effect of being inside always surprises me.

And it might just be technically wrong anyway as salford states its anechoic chamber is even quieter.

There are also plenty of anechoic chambers and Faraday cages available. Seems like it would be relatively easy to test the two prevalent theories.

I've been in an anechoic chamber and it is a little disconcerting and weird to suddenly find yourself hearing nothing at all. I only spent a few minutes in there, and it's not uncomfortable at first, but it feels good to get out.

Yes. It's the same principle that is used in both microwave and audio anechoic chambers. The pyramidal spikes on the walls [1] of an anechoic chamber are much bigger equivalents of the nanotube spikes being used for light.

You can do it, in an anechoic chamber, with a massive array of microphones and an equally large number of speakers, and even then, you can often only target a particular area. It is completely irrational for a space like an airplane.

I lived in Taos, NM for about a year and never heard the eponymous Hum. Recalling the recent Hacker News item about anechoic chambers, it wouldn't surprise me if it has something to do with how quiet the place is. On more than one occasion standing outside the house on the mesa outside of town, the utter silence of the place got to me enough that I had to go back inside and talk to somebody.

I cannot speak to partial deafness, but I used to work in an anechoic chamber. It is indeed soul-suckingly disturbing after short periods of time. Even a totally "silent" environment has tremendous amounts of reverb and low-level reflected noise: you just filter it out automatically. In an anechoic chamber, this noise is gone, and your filter goes haywire.

Missed: * recessed bike pedals for bio-track daily workouts - with Elon/Tesla Model S door handles' silent smoothie pop-out excellence, heels proxemic toggle activation * Apache served not evil Microsoft and their horrible `8' debacle * fully gimbled dynamically leveling as pilot station on bot 45 ft aero-rig sailing sloop * Spherical silent sliding anechoic `Dome of Silence' * evac fans venting Cavendish fumes to window/chimney * smart coffee maker, fridge, microwave, etc. .

Anechoic definitions

adjective

not having or producing echoes; sound-absorbent; "an anechoic chamber"