These solid-state speakers aim to replace legacy push-air amplifiers with ultrasonic amplitude modulation. As fast as the world of audio is developing, all...
The key development made by xMEMS is the company’s ultrasonic amplitude modulation transduction. The speaker can generate ultrasonic sound pulses which are then pushed to a demodulator to transform the sound pulses into audible sound for the user.
how does this ‘demodulator’ work? can someone ELI5?
my wild/ignorant guesses --> is this some sort of an ‘acoustic collimator’ or some mechanism that makes coherent soundwaves for amplification or something? do these devices exist? how do they work?
I’m not really sure, but at least with radio demodulation is done by taking a signal and multiplying it with another signal close in frequency, which generates a low frequency signal based on the difference in frequency of the two tones. Maybe it’s a similar thing with audio. Searching ultrasonic demodulation gave some papers that seem to talk about how to implement it but I didn’t get into reading them
how does this ‘demodulator’ work? can someone ELI5?
my wild/ignorant guesses --> is this some sort of an ‘acoustic collimator’ or some mechanism that makes coherent soundwaves for amplification or something? do these devices exist? how do they work?
I’m not really sure, but at least with radio demodulation is done by taking a signal and multiplying it with another signal close in frequency, which generates a low frequency signal based on the difference in frequency of the two tones. Maybe it’s a similar thing with audio. Searching ultrasonic demodulation gave some papers that seem to talk about how to implement it but I didn’t get into reading them