Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
There is no known lower bound to pink noise in electronics.
Some function generators can also generate white or pink noise.
Their style has been described as "pink noise pop."
Rubbery feet carried me through a sluggish stream of pink noise.
A pink noise that traveled up the spine like the whistle of a toy train.
Pink noise can also be used to treat hyperacusis.
On some digital pink noise generators the crest factor can be specified.
Some speaker manufacturers recommend a period of break-in, for example by playing white or pink noise.
The receiver also wears a set of headphones through which white or pink noise (static) is played.
However, humans still differentiate between white noise and pink noise with ease.
The Prodigy did not feature a white noise or pink noise generator.
In pink noise, each octave carries an equal amount of noise power.
Because pink noise has a tendency to occur in natural physical systems it is often useful in audio production.
Pink noise is used for testing transducers such as loudspeakers and microphones.
Flotation tanks or pink noise played through headphones are often employed for this purpose.
The frequency response of a room may be analyzed using a spectrum analyzer and a pink noise generator for instance.
There was silence, except for the hissing sounds and pink, pink noises from the engine.
It is therefore often referred to as 1/f noise or pink noise, though these terms have wider definitions.
Pink noise generators are commercially available.
Before the audience arrives, random or pseudo-random noise is used as a stimulus signal, usually pink noise.
For noise masking by saturation, see Sound masking or pink noise.
Pink noise can be processed, filtered, and/or effects can be added to produce desired sounds.
When the pink noise is muted, the display shows the lingering tails of noise frequencies that are resonating.
In electronics, white noise will be stronger than pink noise (flicker noise) above some corner frequency.
Systems which guide evacuees during an emergency by the emission of pink noise to the exits are often also called "directional sound" systems.