Recording Silence [message #95280] |
Mon, 21 February 2022 17:11 |
Concorde
Messages: 149 Registered: December 2013
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Master |
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Is there a way to record silence so completely that there is no way to tell if anything was even recorded?
We can have the best audio technology known to man, but can we do that?
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Re: Recording Silence [message #95283 is a reply to message #95280] |
Mon, 21 February 2022 19:01 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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I guess your question is really how to make the signal to noise ratio as high as possible, which is the holy grail of many amplifier makers. They want the passages in between music to be dead solid black quiet. If you have that and good dynamic range for transients, you have a great amp, provided the other obvious specs like distortion are good.
But if all you really wanted was a quiet recording, that's pretty easy in the digital realm. All sampled bits must just be zero. By definition, then, the recording is perfectly "quiet." Of course, we still have to be able to present that to the loudspeakers, which requires an amplifier chain, and that takes us back to the first paragraph.
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