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but before audio filter)
Digital audio uses digital signals for
sound reproduction. This includes
analog-to-digital conversion, digital-to-analog conversion, storage, and transmission.
Digital audio has emerged because of its usefulness in the recording, manipulation, mass-production, and distribution of sound. Modern distribution of music across the internet through on-line stores depends on digital recording and digital audio data compression
algorithms. Distribution of audio as data files rather than as physical objects has significantly reduced costs of distribution. However, it has brought about a rise in
music sharing through peer to peer networks, which is illegal in many countries as copyright infringement. The Recording Industry Association of America and other organizations claim that music sharing severely harms the profitability of their business.
From the
wax cylinder to the compact cassette, analogue audio music storage and reproduction have been based on the same principles upon which human hearing are based. In an analogue audio system, sounds begin as physical waveforms in the air, are transformed into an electrical representation of the waveform, via a transducer (for example, a microphone), and are stored or transmitted. To be re-created into sound, the process is reversed, through amplification and then conversion back into physical waveforms via a loudspeaker. Although its nature may change, its fundamental wave-like characteristics remain unchanged during its storage, transformation, duplication, and amplification. All analogue audio signals are susceptible to noise and distortion, due to the inherent noise present in electronic circuits.
The digital audio chain begins when an analogue audio signal is converted into electrical signals — ‘on/off’ pulses — rather than electro-mechanical signals. This signal is then further encoded to combat any errors that might occur in the storage or transmission of the signal. This "channel coding" is essential to the ability of the digital system to recreate the analogue signal upon replay. An example of a channel code is
Eight-to-Fourteen_Modulation as used in the audio Compact_Disc.
Overview of digital audio
quantization of an analogue signal (red) using Pulse-code_modulation
Digital audio is the method of representing Sound recording and reproduction in
digital form.
An analog signal is converted to a
digital signal at a given
sampling rate and
bit resolution; it may contain multiple channels (2 channels for Stereophonic sound or more for
surround sound).Generally speaking: the higher the sampling rate and bit resolution the more
fidelity, as well as increase the amount of digital data.
Sound Quality
While the goal of both analogue and digital systems are to reproduce audio perfectly, there are several obstacles to achieving this, including:
- Analogue Noise_floor in the capturing circuitry and have inherent capacitance and inductance which limit the bandwidth of the system and Electrical resistance limits the amplitude.
- Digital Quantization_noise in the capturing circuitry, and sampling rate limits the bandwidth and its bit resolution limits the dynamic range (resolution of amplitude creation).
In order to achieve better fidelity, higher quality components are required, which increase overall cost.
Conversion Process
A digital audio signal starts with an
analog-to-digital converter (ADC) that converts an analog signal to a digital signal. The ADC runs at a sampling rate and converts at a known bit resolution. For example,
CD audio has a sampling rate of 44.1 kHz (44,100 samples per second) and 16-bit resolution for each channel (stereo). If the analog signal is not already bandlimited then an
anti-aliasing filter is necessary before conversion, to prevent aliasing in the digital signal. (Aliasing occurs when frequencies above the Nyquist_frequency have not been band limited, and instead appear as audible artifacts in the lower frequencies).
Some audio signals such as those created by Synthesisers#The_modern_digital_synthesizer originate entirely in the digital domain, in which case analog to digital conversion does not take place.
After being sampled with the ADC, the digital signal may then be altered in a process which is called
digital signal processing where it may be
audio filtered or have
sound effects applied.
The digital audio signal may then be stored or transmitted.Digital audio storage can be on a CD, an
iPod, a hard drive,
USB flash drive, CompactFlash, or
any other digital data storage device.
Audio data compression techniques — such as
MP3,
Ogg Vorbis, or Advanced Audio Coding — are commonly employed to reduce the file size.Digital audio can be
Streaming media to other devices.
The last step for digital audio is to be converted back to an analog signal with a digital-to-analog converter (DAC).Like ADCs, DACs run at a specific sampling rate and bit resolution but through the processes of oversampling, upsampling, and downsampling, this sampling rate may not be the same as the initial sampling rate.
Subjective evaluation
Fidelity evaluation is a long-standing issue with audio systems in general and introduction of lossy compression algorithms and
psychoacoustic models has only increased debate.
Audio can be measured and analyzed to more exacting measures than can be done by ear, but what this technical measurement and analysis lacks is the ability to determine if it sounds "good" or "bad" to any given listener.Like any other human opinion, there are numerous parameters that widely vary between people that affect their subjective evaluation of what is good or bad.Such things that pertain to audio include hearing capabilities, personal preferences, location with respect to the speakers, and the room's physical properties.
This is not to say that subjective evaluation is unique to digital audio; digital audio can add to the fervor of discussion because it does introduce more things (e.g., lossy compression, psychoacoustic models) that can be debated.
History of digital audio use in commercial recording
Commercial digital recording of classical and jazz music began in the early 1970s, pioneered by Japanese companies such as Denon, the BBC, and British record label Decca Records (who in the mid-70s developed digital audio recorders of their own design for mastering of their albums), although experimental recordings exist from the 1960s. The first 16-bit PCM recording in the United States was made by
Thomas Stockham at the Santa Fe Opera in 1976 on a Soundstream recorder. In most cases there was no mixing stage involved; a stereo digital recording was made and used unaltered as the master tape for subsequent commercial release. These unmixed digital recordings are still described as SPARS Code since the technology involved is purely digital. (Unmixed analogue recordings are likewise usually described as SPARS Code to denote a single generation of analogue recording.)
Although the first-ever digital recording of a non-classical music piece,
Morrissey-Mullen's cover of the
Rose Royce hit
Love Don't Live Here Anymore (released 1979 as a Gramophone_record#Vinyl_quality Extended play ) was recorded in 1978 in music at
EMI's
Abbey Road Studios recording studios, the first entirely digitally recorded (DDD) popular music album was Ry Cooder's
Bop Till You Drop, recorded in late
1978. It was unmixed, being recorded straight to a two-track
3M digital recorder in the studio. Many other top recording artists were early adherents of digital recording. Others, such as former
Beatles producer George Martin, felt that the multitrack digital recording technology of the early 1980s had not reached the sophistication of analogue systems. Martin used digital mixing, however, to reduce the distortion and noise that an analogue master tape would introduce (thus ADD). An early example of an analogue recording that was digitally mixed is
Fleetwood Mac's 1979 release
Tusk (album).
Digital audio technologies
Storage technologies:
Digital audio interfaces
Audio-specific interfaces include:
Naturally, any digital bus (e.g., Universal Serial Bus, FireWire, and Peripheral Component Interconnect) can carry digital audio.
References
- Borwick, John, ed., 1994: Sound Recording Practice (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
- Ifeachor, Emmanuel C., and Jervis, Barrie W., 2002: Digital Signal Processing: A Practical Approach (Harlow, England: Pearson Education Limited)
- Rabiner, Lawrence R., and Gold, Bernard, 1975: Theory and Application of Digital Signal Processing (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.)
- Watkinson, John, 1994: The Art of Digital Audio (Oxford: Focal Press)
See also
digital audio from FOLDOC
digital audio < multimedia, file format > A sequence of discrete samples taken from a continuous sound (audio) waveform. Tens of thousands of samples are taken each second.
Digital Audio Tape from FOLDOC
Digital Audio Tape < storage, music > (DAT) A format for storing music on magnetic tape, developed in the mid-1980s by Sony and Philips. As digital music was popularized by compact ...
Digital Audio Labs - professional audio products for for the PC
Sells products that offer a wide range of hardware-based solutions for PCs, used primarily by professional sound recording organizations and individuals.
Amazon.co.uk: MP3 & Digital Audio Players: Electronics & Photo
Sandisk MP3 Player Sansa Clip 2Gb Black With Radio feature included
The Digital Audio Co: CD mastering, sound to picture, CD, DVD ...
The Digital Audio Co: premier UK audio post-production and CD mastering facility. Replication Audio CD, CDRom and DVD manufacture, CDR and cassette duplication.
Get DAB Digital Radio - the clear choice
DAB stands for Digital Audio Broadcasting and involve technologies that broadcast sound digitally across radio waves. This means audiences enjoy digital quality sound that's hiss ...
DAB Digital Audio Broadcasting in the UK
Help and advice with DAB digital radio. A look at DAB radios, plus general information, advice and links relating to DAB digital radio in the UK
Digital audio - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Digital audio uses digital signals for sound reproduction. This includes analog-to-digital conversion, digital-to-analog conversion, storage, and transmission.
Digital Audio Systems: mp3, mp4, aac, vqf
The complete audio site for mp3, mp4, aac, vqf and ogg. Audio files, links and information about coding/decoding/playback for all platforms.
DAB digital radio - Car Audio Centre
DAB digital radio, Dealers In car Head Unit Stereo and Audio Products in the UK. CD, MP3, and DVD, DAB radio, GPS Navigation, amplifiers, and CD changers