**warning**: do not play this sound with full volume on speakers with an amplifier; you risk damaging the driver through exertion. Format: wav - 24 bit, 44. 1khz [mono] - loopabledescription:a 30 second long pure sine wave of 14hz, at a constant spl level of -5 decibels. The audio file is loopable with a coherent crossing point from end to beginning. If you would like to read up on the infrasound phenomenon go here:http://goo. Gl/gmbsvm. Methodology:synthesis generation in sound forge pro macosx. -------------. This can be used for experimental purposes. I used infrasound in a horror film; attempting to create a physical sense of terror with the motion picture at specific times. It is believed by some that a high enough amplitude of infrasound can be used as a weapon. -------------. If you like or dislike this sound, please comment on your thoughts :). Reminder:this sound is licenced under cc0 [public domain] - so you are free to use and abuse it. I wouldn't mind a credit though if you're feeling generous. . .
Fresh new sound by prod. Neo. Would love to hear what y'all come up with, leave your creation links in the comments below for a follow on all media platforms. Created using a sine wave sped up and on glide in omnisphere.
This sound consists of sine waves only playing the musical note c, each for a total of 10 seconds. Rendered as a 200/32 wav file (linear pcm, 32 bit little-endian floating point, 200000 hz) in audacity.
The data contained in this file should represent a full period sine wave. But because of the bug(s) in the header of wave file, it gets distorted (i. E. If you found the bug and fixed it in binary, you'd get perfect sine wave).
Very bass harmonics for kick (to be played in parallel) and at lower volume for snare and tom bass harmonics. It was created by filtering a 60 hz sine wave (remove all the high frequencies but also the extreme low).
Exactly one complete wavelength of a 1-hertz sine wave. In audacity, you can use the repeat effect and then the change speed effect to generate any frequency. It is not meant to be a usable sound in its current form.