Microsoft has created the quietest place on earth, according to Guinness World Records
This chamber in Microsoft's audio lab is anechoic, meaning it's completely devoid of echoes. All sounds are absorbed.
All the giant wedges you see in this room are made of sound-absorbing materials.
We need a highly controlled environment," says Gopal Gopal, principal human factors engineer at Microsoft's audio lab. "These labs are about creating a rock-solid acoustic controlled environment.
When you plug your power supply into your device, it makes noise. When you adjust the brightness of the display on your screen, it makes noise," Munroe says. "This chamber gives you the opportunity to look for those really small signals that can have a big impact on the end user.
Here's a little bit of context on what Microsoft's been able to achieve: A jet engine creates about 136 A-weighted decibels (dbA), which is how loud sounds are perceived by the human ear.
Zero dbA is the lowest threshold of human hearing.
And a random air particle in space creates about -23 dBA. You can't get any quieter than that because that's just air particles moving.
Before Microsoft approached Guinness World Records about its own audio lab, the world's quietest place was an anechoic chamber in the Orfield Laboratory in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Sound in that room measured at -13 dBA.
Microsoft soundly (sorry) beat that record: Its audio lab is -20.6 dBA, right at the edge of what's physically possible.
Microsoft's anechoic chamber will help the company test future products. "It's the best tool available." Munroe says. "It's a tool we can use across the company for scenarios we probably haven't even thought about yet."
Check out the video below to watch Microsoft's team earn its Guinness World Record for quietest place on earth.
http://www.youtube.com/embed/Cyqc_4ixV80
Width: 1280px
Height: 720px
Popular Right Now
Advertisement