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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to variable-directivity microphone
devices, and more particularly to a variable-directivity microphone device
in which the phase of the high-frequency range component of the output
signal of one microphone of at least two microphones is as a result
invented and this high-frequency range component is mixed to the output
signal of the other microphone.
Heretofore, as a microphone device capable of varying its directivity,
there has been a microphone device in which two microphones having primary
sound-pressure gradient unidirectivity (hereinafter referred to as primary
unidirectivity) are arranged in a mutually confronting state, and their
outputs are mixed by means of a mixer. Furthermore, there has also been a
microphone device in which two unidirectional microphones are arranged to
face the same direction, and the output of one of the microphones is mixed
with opposite phase with the output of the other microphone.
In each of these devices, the directivity of the microphone device is
varied effectively, by varying the mixture ratio to obtain the final
output signal.
In this case, the directional pattern P obtained by mixing the outputs of
the first and second microphones, in terms of the sensitivity A of the
first microphone of the two microphones, the sensitivity B of the second
microphone, the angle .theta. between the axis l of both microphones and
the sound source, the distance D between the first and second microphones,
and the wavelength constant K, becomes as follows.
##EQU1##
When the sensitivities A and B of the first and second microphones are
identical, that is, A=B, the above Eq. (1) becomes
##EQU2##
By appropriately selecting the value of A in Eq. (2), a directional
pattern of secondary unidirectivity can be obtained.
In this known device, however, since the outputs of the two microphones are
mixed with mutually opposite phases, a dip in the frequency characteristic
occurs at a frequency F corresponding to the wavelength of the picked-up
sound wave when this wavelength is equal to the distance D between the
front faces of the two microphones (F being 11.3 KHz, for example, when D
is 3 cm.). At the same time, at a frequency where the wavelength of the
sound wave is very much less than the distance D, a frequency
characteristic wherein the response decreases in a proportion of 6 dB/oct
with decreasing frequency is exhibited.
Accordingly, in a known microphone device, the output of the aforementioned
mixer is passed through an equalizer having a characteristic which is the
opposite of the above described frequency characteristic, that is, a
frequency characteristic wherein the response increases with decreasing
frequency. By this expedient, a signal of flat characteristic wherein the
frequency characteristic has been corrected, particularly in the
medium-and low-frequency ranges, is obtained from the output of the
equalizer.
In a signal obtained from the above mentioned mixer, however, the response
decrease in the frequency characteristics is of the order of 29 dB at 100
Hz, for example, the above mentioned equalizer must have an equalizing
characteristic which carries out response correction of the order of 29 dB
at 100 Hz. Consequently, for the above mentioned equalizer, an equalizer
having an equalizing characteristic of great correction quantity must be
used. As a result, the S/N ratio of the signal obtained from the equalizer
is small, particularly in the low-frequency range. Furthermore, in the
case where the microphones are used outdoors, noise due to wind in a range
of relatively low-frequency is easily produced. Furthermore, the problem
is that touch noise and the like in a range of relatively low-frequency is
also easily produced when the microphones are touched.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is a general object of the present invention to provide a
new and useful variable-directivity microphone device in which the above
described problems have been overcome.
Another and specific object of the invention is to provide a
variable-directivity microphone device in which at least two microphones
are used, and the phase of the high-frequency component in the output
signal of one of these microphones is inverted, and the high-frequency
component is mixed (added) with variable mixing ratio with the output
signal of the other microphone.
In accordance with device of the present invention, in the high-frequency
range, the resultant effect is substantially the same as that when the
outputs from the two microphones are subjected to subtraction mixing,
whereby a secondary unidirectional pattern can be obtained similarly as in
a known device. On the other hand, in the low-frequency range, the
resultant effect is substantially the same as that when the outputs from
the microphones are subjected to addition mixing, whereby the output after
mixing has a substantially flat frequency characteristic and may be
considered to be an output from a signal microphone of a primary
unidirectivity, this directivity assuming a primary unidirectional
pattern. Since the response does not decrease as in a known device, the
response, particularly in the low-frequency range, in the frequency
characteristic can be made higher than that of the frequency
characteristic of a known device wherein the outputs of primary
unidirectional microphones are merely subjected to only subtraction
mixing. For this reason, the correction quantity of an equalizer for
correcting the frequency so as to obtain a flat frequency characteristic
of the signal after mixing, can be set at a low value, whereby the S/N
ratio can be made higher than those of the prior art.
Another object of the invention is to provide a variable-directivity
microphone device in which at least two microphones are employed, and the
output signal of one of these microphones is passed through a variable
phase shifter to invert the phase of the high-frequency range component
thereof, this component then being added to the output signal of the other
microphone.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a variable-directivity
microphone device in which at least two microphones are used, the output
signal of one of the microphones is passed through a high-pass filter, and
the output signal thus obtained is mixed with (subtracted from) the output
signal of the other microphone with variable mixing ratio.
A further object of the invention is to provide a variable-directivity
microphone device in which at least two microphones are used, the output
signal of one of the microphones is passed through a variable high-pass
filter, and the output signal thus obtained is mixed with (subtracted
from) the output signal of the other microphone as it is.
Other objects and further features of the present invention will be
apparent from the following detailed description with respect to the
preferred embodiments of the invention when read in conjunction with the
accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a systematic block diagram of a first embodiment of a
variable-directivity microphone device of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a side view, with parts cut away, of one example of a microphone
unit;
FIG. 3 is a graph showing the phase characteristic of a phase-shifter in
the systematic block diagram of FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a circuit diagram showing one embodiment of a phase-shifter;
FIG. 5 is a graph showing the frequency characteristic of the output signal
of a mixer in the systematic block diagram of FIG. 1;
FIG. 6 is a graph showing the directivity characteristic of the device in
FIG. 1;
FIG. 7 is a systematic block diagram of a second embodiment of a
variable-directivity microphone device of the present invention;
FIG. 8 is a circuit diagram showing one embodiment of a variable
phase-shifter in the systematic block diagram of FIG. 7;
FIG. 9 is a circuit diagram showing one embodiment of a variable equalizer
in the systematic block diagram of FIG. 7;
FIGS. 10 and 11 are, respectively, graphs showing the frequency
characteristics of the device of FIG. 7 in the 90 degrees and 0 degree
direction to the sound source;
FIG. 12 is a side view, with parts cut away, of a television camera applied
with a variable-directivity microphone device of the present invention;
FIG. 13 is a systematic block diagram showing a third embodiment of a
variable-directivity microphone device of the present invention;
FIG. 14 is a circuit diagram showing one example of a variable equalizer in
the systematic block diagram of FIG. 13;
FIG. 15 is a systematic block diagram showing a fourth embodiment of a
variable-directivity microphone device of the present invention; and
FIG. 16 is a circuit diagram showing one embodiment of a variable high-pass
filter circuit in the systematic block diagram of FIG. 15.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In FIGS. 1 and 2, a pair of primary unidirectivity microphones 11 and 12
are arranged facing a front side 13a of a cylinder 13 so that their
respective center axis lines coincide with a line l. The cylinder 13
comprises a frame 14 which has a plurality of openings, and a punching
metal 15 provided in the inner periphery and front surfaces of the frame
14. The distance D between the vibrating plates of the microphones 11 and
12 is set, for example, at 3 centimeters.
When the center axis line l of a microphone unit 10 is aimed towards a
sound source 16, the output signal of the microphone 11 is supplied to a
mixer (adder) 18 through a phase-shifter 17. On the other hand, the output
signal of the microphone 12 is supplied to the mixer 18 and mixed (added)
with the signal of the phase-shifter 17 in the same phase. The mixer 18
varies the ratio between the signal from the phase-shifter 17 and the
output signal from the microphone 12, and is organized to add these
signals.
The phase-shifter 17 comprises, for example, an operational amplifier 25
connected as shown in FIG. 4, resistors R.sub.1 through R.sub.3, and a
capacitor C.sub.1, and possesses a phase characteristic as shown in FIG.
3. This phase characteristic shows on the frequency axis, the phase-shift
larger than -90 degrees towards the -180 degrees direction as the ratio
.omega./.omega..sub.a of the angular frequency .omega. and the angular
frequency .omega..sub.a which lags the angular frequency .omega. becomes
larger than unity (1), and the phase-shift smaller than -90 degrees
towards the 0 degree direction as the ratio .omega./.omega..sub.a becomes
less than unity. Accordingly, among the signals passed through the
phase-shifter 17, the signal component in the frequency band range
(high-frequency band range) where the ratio .omega./.omega..sub.a is
larger than unity is phase-shifted by 180 degrees, and the signal
component in the frequency range (low-frequency range) where the ratio
.omega./.omega..sub.a is less than unity is hardly phase-shifted.
Therefore, as far as the high-frequency range component is concerned, the
output of the microphone 11 is phase-inverted and added to the output of
the microphone 12 (that is, the output of the microphone 11 is subtracted
from the output of the microphone 12). Hence, concerning the
high-frequency range component, similar mixed outputs and frequency
characteristics as those obtained by the previous devices can be obtained.
On the other hand, as far as the low-frequency range component is
concerned, the output of the microphone 11 is not phase-inverted and added
to the output of the microphone 12 as it is. Accordingly, when the
wavelength of the incoming sound waves of the microphones 11 and 12 is in
a low-frequency range large enough so that the distance D between the two
microphones can be neglected, the outputs of the microphones 11 and 12 are
added, which means that an output twice that of the microphones 11 or 12
can be obtained. Therefore, in this low-frequency range, a flat
characteristic substantially identical to that of a primary unidirectivity
microphone can be obtained, and there is no attenuation as seen in the
above described previous devices, and unlike the known device described
above, there is no attenuation. By varying the mixing ratio of the mixer
18, the directivity of the microphone device can be varied from primary to
secondary unidirectivity.
If the phase characteristic of the phase-shifter 17 is designated by
.phi.(.omega.), the directivity pattern P.sub.1 obtained by mixing the
outputs of the microphones 11 and 12 can be described by the following
equation:
##EQU3##
When the sensitivities A and B, respectively, of the microphones 11 and 12
are identical (A=B), the above equation becomes:
##EQU4##
Here, in the equation (4),
##EQU5##
are respectively considered as a constant and a variable, the angular
frequency .omega..sub.a lagging by 90 degrees in the phase-shifter 17 is
set at 50 Hz, and the distance D=3 cm, and the angle .theta.=0, 90 degrees
are substituted to the above variable. The frequency characteristic and
the directivity pattern obtained here are respectively shown in FIGS. 5
and 6. As clearly seen in FIGS. 5 and 6, in the high-frequency range, it
shows a directivity characteristic substantially identical to that of a
secondary unidirectivity microphone, and in the low-frequency range, it
shows directivity characteristic substantially identical to that of a
primary unidirectivity microphone. The degradation of the response as seen
in the known devices is not seen in the low to intermediate frequency
ranges, and the difference between the maximum and minimum values are in
the range of 13.5 dB.
Thus the correction characteristic of an equalizer 19 connected to the
mixer 18 need only be a characteristic comprising an opposite
characteristic to that shown in FIG. 5 where degradation in the range of
13.5 dB in the intermediate frequency range is corrected. The equalizer 19
is not required to possess a large correction quantity as in the previous
devices, and the correction quantity can be small. As compared to before,
the signal obtained from an output terminal 20 does not introduce
degradation of the S/N ratio even in the intermediate to low frequency
ranges, and sound noise, touch noise and the like is hardly produced.
Furthermore, according to the present invention, the outputs of both the
microphones are added in the same phase in the low-frequency range, thus
only a primary unidirectivity characteristic can be obtained. And, upon
ordinary recording, in the low-frequency range of less than 200 Hz, the
effect hardly differs in the recording when the recording is performed
under the secondary unidirectivity or noise unidirectivity
characteristics. As a result, there is no problem in the practical point
of view, if in the low-frequency range, the device of the present
invention is a primary unidirectivity device.
The phase-shifter 17 is not limited to the primary phase-shifter shown in
FIG. 4, and can be secondary phase-shifter.
Next, a second embodiment of the present invention will be described in
conjunction with FIG. 7 and the following. In FIG. 7, those parts which
are the same as the corresponding parts in FIG. 1 are designated by like
reference numerals, and their description of such parts will not be
repeated.
The output of the microphone 11 is supplied to a mixer 31 through a
variable primary phase-shifter 30, and mixed (added) with the output of
the microphone 12 as it is. In this embodiment of the present invention,
the mixer 31 is not organized to vary the mixing ratio.
The phase-shifter 30 comprises, for example, an operational amplifier 25
connected as shown in FIG. 8, resistors R.sub.1 through R.sub.3, a
variable resistor VR.sub.1, and a capacitor C.sub.1.
In the above stated equation (4), .phi.(.omega.) can be described as:
##EQU6##
Furthermore, in the equation (4),
##EQU7##
and {.sub.e -j.phi.(.omega.)+.sub.e -jKD cos .theta.} are respectively
considered as a constant and a variable, the angular frequency
.omega..sub.a lagging by 90 degrees in the variable phase-shifter 30 is
varied from 10 Hz to 400 Hz by varying the resistance value of the
variable resistor VR.sub.1, and the distance D=3 cm, and the angle
.theta.=0, 90 degrees are substituted to the above variable. The frequency
characteristics are shown in FIG. 10 (.theta.=0) and FIG. 11 (.theta.=90).
A variable equalizer 32 connected to the mixer 31 comprises, for example,
an operational amplifier 35 connected as shown in FIG. 9, resistors
R.sub.5 through R.sub.8, a variable resistor VR.sub.2, and capacitors
C.sub.5 and C.sub.6. The variable resistor VR.sub.2 links with the the
variable resistor VR.sub.1 of the variable phase-shifter 30 shown in FIG.
8 and varied of its resistance value. With the change in the
phase-shifting quantity of the variable phase-shifter 30 with respect to
the resistance change of the variable resistor VR.sub.2, the equalizing
characteristic of the variable equalizer 32 changes with respect to the
resistance change of the variable resistor VR.sub.2. Therefore, even if
the frequency characteristic changes with respect to the quantitive change
in phase-shift of the variable phase-shifter 30, the output signal
frequency characteristic can be corrected so as to be flat, by the
variable equalizer 32.
Furthermore, in the circuit of FIG. 9, the capacitance of the capacitor
C.sub.6 is set at a capacitance more than ten times that of capacitor
C.sub.5, and the values of the capacitors C.sub.5 and C.sub.6 and the
resistors R.sub.7 and R.sub.8 are set to that maximum correction quantity
can be obtained at the maximum resistances of variable resistors VR.sub.1
and VR.sub.2.
As clearly seen in FIG. 11, the frequency characteristic flattens as the
angular frequency .omega..sub.a increases, thus approaching the flat
frequency characteristic of a primary unidirectivity microphone. On the
other hand, the frequency characteristic deviates from being flat as the
angular frequency .omega..sub.a decreases, thus approaching to
substantially identical frequency characteristics as those of the ordinary
secondary unidirectivity microphones in the ordinary usage band range.
Therefore, a desired directivity characteristic can be obtained by varying
the phase-shift quantity in the variable phase-shifter 30. When this
phase-shift quantity is continuously varied from .omega..sub.a =10 Hz to
.omega..sub.a =400 Hz, the directivity characteristic can be varied in the
primary unidirectivity to the secondary unidirectivity range.
An example of a television camera applied with a variable directivity
microphone device of the present invention will now be described in
conjunction with FIG. 12.
The television camera 40 has a zoom lens system 41 mounted on the front
part of a camera body 42. This zoom lens system 41 comprises a fixed
cylinder 43 containing the lens system, a distance matching ring 44, and a
zoom ring 45. A zoom operating lever 46 is fixed to the zoom ring 45.
The zoom ring 45 is integrally formed with a rotating cylinder extending
rearward into the camera body and supporting, in the camera body, a gear
47 fixed coaxially to the rotating cylinder. Also within the camera body
42, a gear 49 fixedly mounted on the rotor shaft of a drive motor 48 is
meshed with the gear 47. A gear 51 fixedly mounted on the rotating shaft
of a variable resistor, also accommodated within the camera body 42, is
also meshed with the gear 47.
A housing 52 accommodating the above circuit is mounted on top of the
camera body 42. This housing 52 fixedly supports a rod 53 directed
straight forward and supports at its forward end a microphone unit
accommodating cylinder 54.
When the zoom lens system is to be operated in zooming operation, the
operator holds the lever 46 and directly rotates the zoom ring 45 in the
case of manual operation. In the case of automatic operation, a switch is
closed to supply electric power to the drive motor 48 and cause it to
rotate. This driving rotation is transmitted via the gears 49 and 47 to
rotate the zoom ring 45.
A variable resistor 50 comprises variable resistors VR.sub.1 and VR.sub.2.
By manipulating the lever 46 or operating the motor 48, the zoom ring 45
is rotated, and zooming up is carried out. Together with the rotation of
the zoom ring 45, the rotating shaft of the variable resistor 50 rotates,
and the sliders of the variable resistors VR.sub.1 and VR.sub.2 undergo
sliding displacement, and the resistance change, changing the directivity
of the microphone device.
A third embodiment of the present invention will now be described in
conjunction with FIG. 13. The output signal of the microphone 11 is
supplied to a mixer (subtraction device) 62 through a high-pass filter 60
and a variable resistor 61, and mixed to (subtracted from) the output
signal of the microphone 12.
The high-pass filter 60 has, for example, an attenuation characteristic in
which the cut-off frequency is 100 Hz and the deviation is 6 dB/oct. The
signal having its low-frequency component attenuated by way of the
high-pass filter 60 is provided to the mixer 62 after undergoing level
adjustment by the variable resistor 61.
Here, when the resistance of the variable resistor 61 is adjusted to the
maximum value, the output of the microphone 11 is not attenuated by the
high-pass filter 60 in the high-frequency range where the frequency is
higher than that of the cut-off frequency of the high-pass filter 60, and
subtracted from the output of the microphone 12 in the same phase and
level. Therefore, the high-frequency range component of the output of the
microphone 11 is phase-inverted and added to the output of the microphone
12, and hence the same effect is obtained as that obtained in the first
embodiment of the present invention.
On the other hand, of the output of the microphone 11, the low-frequency
range component which is lower than the cut-off frequency of the high-pass
filter 60 is attenuated by the high-pass filter 60 and mixed with the
output of the microphone 12, and in reality, as far as the low-frequency
range component is concerned, only the output of the microphone 12 is
obtained. Accordingly, in the low-frequency range, the frequency
characteristic is flat comprising no attenuation, and substantially
identical to that of a primary unidirectivity microphone.
If the phase characteristic of the high-pass filter 60 is designated by
.phi.(.omega.), the output P.sub.2 obtained by attenuating the output of
the microphones 11 and 12, including the high-pass filter 60, can be
described by the following equation:
##EQU8##
As the resistance of the variable resistor 61 is varied from the maximum to
the minimum value, the output level of the microphone 11 decreases, and at
the minimum resistance value, the output consists only of the output of
the microphone 12. Accordingly, by varying the resistance of the variable
resistor 61 and varying the sensitivity ratio between the sensitivity A of
the microphone 11 and sensitivity B of the microphone 12 of the equation
(5) including the high-pass filter 60, a secondary directivity can be
obtained when the resistance of the variable resistor 61 is at maximum
value, and a primary directivity can be obtained when the resistance of
the resistor 61 is at minimum value, hence being continuously variable in
the range between the primary directivity and secondary directivity range.
The output of the mixer 62 is obtained from the terminal 20 through the
variable equalizer 63. The variable equalizer 63 comprises, for example,
an operational amplifier 64, resistors R.sub.10 through R.sub.12, a
variable resistor VR.sub.5, and capacitors C.sub.10 and C.sub.11 as shown
in FIG. 14. The variable resistor VR.sub.5 is linked to the variable
resistor 61 and varied, and with the variation of the mixing level, the
equalizing characteristic due to the variable equalizer 63 is varied.
Furthermore, when the resistance of the variable resistor is of minimum
value, the variable resistor VR.sub.5 is organized to have the minimum
resistance. The correction characteristic according to the frequency
characteristic when .theta.=0 degree in the intermediate and high
frequency range is determined by capacitors C.sub.10 and C.sub.11, a
resistor R.sub.12, and the variable resistor VR.sub.5, and the correction
characteristic according to the low-frequency range is determined by
capacitors C.sub.10 and C.sub.11, resistors R.sub.11 and R.sub.12, and the
variable resistor VR.sub.5.
A fourth embodiment of the present invention will now be described in
conjunction with FIG. 15. In FIG. 15, those parts which are the same as
the corresponding parts in FIGS. 1 and 13 are designated by like reference
numerals, and their descriptions of such parts will not be repeated. In
this embodiment of the present invention, a variable high-pass filter 65
is used instead of the high-pass filter 60 and the variable resistor 61 in
FIG. 13 of the third embodiment.
The variable high-pass filter 65 comprises, for example, a capacitor
C.sub.13 and a variable resistor VR.sub.6 as shown in FIG. 16. By varying
the resistance of the variable resistor VR.sub.6, the cut-off frequency of
the variable high-pass filter 65 is varied in the range of 50 Hz to 10
kHz.
When the cut-off frequency of the variable resistor VR.sub.6 is low, the
outputs of the microphones 11 and 12 are in reality subtracted within a
large frequency range, and secondary directivity is obtained. On the other
hand, when the cut-off frequency is high, the output of the microphone 12
is obtained in reality on a large scale in relation to the output ratio of
the microphone 11 over a large frequency range, and hence primary
unidirectivity is obtained. Accordingly, accompanied with the change in
the variable VR.sub.6, the directivity can be continuously varied from the
primary to secondary unidirectivity range.
In each of the above embodiments, the microphone unit 10 is organized to
employ two microphones. However, as described in United States Patent
Application Ser. No. 142,845 entitled "Variable-Directivity Microphone
Device", the microphone unit 10 may be organized to employ three
microphones.
Further, this invention is not limited to these embodiments but various
variations and modifications may be made without departing from the scope
of the invention.
* * * * *
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Description  |
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