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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 12102, 2024 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38802427

ABSTRACT

Recently, the possibility to reproduce complex continuous acoustic signals via pulsed laser-plasma sound sources was demonstrated. This was achieved by optoacoustic transduction of dense laser pulse trains, modulated via single- or multi-bit Sigma-Delta, in the air or on solid targets. In this work, we extend the laser-sound concept to amplitude modulation techniques. Particularly, we demonstrate the possibility of transcoding audio streams directly into acoustic pulse streams by analog pulsed amplitude modulation. For this purpose, an electro-optic modulator is used to achieve pulse-to-pulse amplitude modulation of the laser radiation, similarly to the multi-level Sigma-Delta method. The modulator is directly driven by the analog input stream through an audio interface. The performance of the system is evaluated at a proof-of-principle level for the reproduction of test audio signals such as single tones, double tones and sine sweeps, within a limited frequency range of the audible spectrum. The results are supported by computational simulations of the reproduced acoustic signals using a linear convolution model that takes as input the audio signal and the laser-generated acoustic pulse profile. The study shows that amplitude modulation allows for significant relaxation of the laser repetition rate requirements compared to the Sigma-Delta-based implementation, albeit at the potential cost of increased distortion of the reproduced sound signal. The nature of the distortions is analyzed and a preliminary experimental and computational investigation for their suppression is presented.

2.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 4353, 2024 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38388676

ABSTRACT

This work studies the spectrum of discrete-time Uniform-sampling pulse width modulation (UPWM) signals originating from stochastic input signals. It demonstrates that for ergodic input sequences of independent and identically distributed random variables, the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) of the UPWM signals can be directly estimated from the input signal's statistics. Consequently, it is shown that if the input signal can be modeled as such a random sequence, only statistical information of the sequence is required for the accurate estimation of the DFT of the UPWM signal. This is achieved here by proving that the DFT estimators obtained by observation of the input sequence within a time window are consistent estimators of the DFT coefficients of the underlying random process. Moreover, for signals whose generalized probability density functions can be expressed as functions of a small number of parameters, the DFT coefficients can be estimated or even calculated via closed-form expressions with linear complexity. Examples are given for input signals derived from symmetric and asymmetric distributions. The results are validated by comparison with evaluations of the UPWM signal's DFT via the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT). The proposed method provides a mathematical framework for the analysis and design of UPWM systems whose inputs have known statistical properties.

3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 476, 2021 01 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33483555

ABSTRACT

This work presents a novel laser-based optoacoustic transducer capable of reproducing controlled and continuous sound of arbitrary complexity in the air or on solid targets. Light-to-sound transduction is achieved via laser-induced breakdown, leading to the formation of plasma acoustic sources in any desired spatial location. The acoustic signal is encoded into pulse streams via a discrete-time audio modulation and is reproduced by fast consecutive excitation of the target medium with appropriately modulated laser pulses. This results in the signal being directly reconstructed at the desired location of the target medium without the need for a receiver or demodulation device. In this work, the principles and evaluation results of such a novel laser-sound prototype system are presented. The performance of the prototype is evaluated by systematic experimental measurements of audio test signals, from which the basic acoustical response is derived. Moreover, a generic computational model is presented that allows for the simulation of laser-sound reproduction of 1-bit or multibit audio streams. The model evaluations are validated by comparison with the acoustic measurements, whereby a good agreement is found. Finally, the computational model is used to simulate an ideal optoacoustic transducer based on the specifications of state-of-the-art commercially available lasers.

4.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 146(3): EL212, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31590509

ABSTRACT

Plasma filaments in air induced by femtosecond laser pulses lead to the generation of strong shock waves. This letter presents a systematic study, both experimental and theoretical, of the acoustic radiation by femtosecond laser-generated filaments. A theoretical model is developed based on the experimental results and is used to evaluate the directivity of the filament's acoustic radiation within and beyond the audible frequency range. It is shown that the acoustic directivity of plasma filaments can be derived from the model of a weighted acoustic line source, consisting of elementary point sources with N-shaped excitation.

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