When the viola section of an orchestra with six members plays together, is the sound 6 times as loud as when a single viola plays? Explain. Is the intensity 6 times what it would be for a single viola? [Hint: The six sound waves are not coherent]

Elisabeth Wiley

Elisabeth Wiley

Open question

2022-08-18

When the viola section of an orchestra with six members plays together, is the sound 6 times as loud as when a single viola plays? Explain. Is the intensity 6 times what it would be for a single viola? [Hint: The six sound waves are not coherent]

Answer & Explanation

Dereon Parker

Dereon Parker

Beginner2022-08-19Added 11 answers

The difference between two intensity levels β 2 β 1 can be expressed as:
β 2 β 1 = 10 d B log 10 I 2 I 1
Where I 1 and I 2 are the two intensities. Sound intensity level can be used to approximate how humans perceive loudness.
Since the waves are not coherent, there won't be any constructive or destructive behaviour. Final intensity is the sum of individual intensities. Therefore, the final intensity is 6 times what it would be for a single instrument.
Substitute I 2 I 1 = 6 into the above equation for the difference between two intensity levels:
β 2 β 1 = 10 d B log 10 I 2 I 1
= 10 d B log 10 6
=7.78dB
Therefore, loudness increases by around 7.78dB

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