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At 10:49 AM 3/10/98 -0800, you wrote: >>To add fuel about sounds and feels of sound, I read somewhere a great >>history for those who think that beyond 20 Khz (at best) there is no >>reason to possibly ear anything. > >I think it's actually Mr. Neve who talks about this. I think the deal is >that you can't hear a continuous tone over 20KHz (lower if you've abused >your ears like me....) but you can discern transients that have higher >frequencies. I think Neve would demonstrate this by switching a 15KHz sine >wave and a 15KHz square wave. All the frequencies that make it a square >wave are above the human range of hearing, so it should sound the same as >the sine wave, but supposedly it doesn't. Do the higuer harmonics on a square wave count as transients? >well, that's another thing with poor quality digital gear. If the audio >input is not filtered right and you put higher frequencies into it, they >will alias into the audio. Basically they mirror around the 1/2sample rate >frequency. It's sort of a cool affect, but a terrible thing to do to >music. >If the aliasing frequencies are low in the first place, the result will be >subtle and give you that uncomfortable feeling. I was just thinking that - the ear supposedly picks up sound by registering the beats along the ear cana via the little hairs. Could it be that stuff at 56kHz is being aliased to a lower frequency in the ear? Or that there is a standing wave resonance within the ear at that frequency? Or that the hair resonate at that frequency? Michael