What is the working principle of the Loudspeaker?


    An audio signal source such as a microphone or recording produces an electrical "image" of the sound. That is, it produces an electrical signal that has the same frequency and harmonic content, and a size that reflects the relative intensity of the sound as it changes. The job of the amplifier is to take that electrical image and make it larger -- large enough in power to drive the coils of a loudspeaker. Having a "high fidelity" amplifier means that you make it larger without changing any of its properties. Any changes would be perceived as distortions of the sound since the human ear is amazingly sensitive to such changes. Once the amplifier has made the electrical image large enough, it applies it to the voice coils of the loudspeaker, making them vibrate with a pattern that follows the variations of the original signal. The voice coil is attached to and drives the cone of the loudspeaker, which in turn drives the air. This action on the air produces sound that more-or-less reproduces the sound pressure variations of the original signal.
ztzaudio
The OP plagiarized:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Audio/spk.html
And I've seen this post before, although it has since been removed. I'm not sure what the OP's game is.


Hi agoners,  Some things to add.  Microphones and drivers are electromechanical devices.  As far as room sounds in recordings, they are important and are manipulated for the sound the engineer is trying to achieve.  You would be very impressed to see all the tricks engineers have to manipulate audio.  Cheers
Good catch by Simao.

If ".com" is appended to the OP's screen-name the resulting URL is that of a speaker driver manufacturer in China.  Perhaps the OP is seeking to subtly publicize his company, or to elevate its ranking in search engine results.

Regards,
-- Al 
Dear @simao  : The OP joined Agon in March-28-19 . His game only knows him.

R.