The nyquist shannon sampling theorem is the idea that as long as you capture ‘samples’ of signal (like the air pressure over time that is sound) faster that twice the period of the highest frequency component of the signal, all the information is captured and the aignal can be reproduced exactly (in theory).
maybe think of it like looking through a fence. As long as nothing on the other side of the fence is shorter than the spacing between posts, you can everything on the other side.
note that any file can be encoded as text with something like Base64
This does involve a cutoff point in the “maximum” frequency of a signal. Actual sound contains a much larger frequency spectrum than our audio file formats are designed to handle.
Actual sound also contains a larger frequency spectrum than our ears are designed to handle. Not throwing shade, our audio file formats also contain a narrower frequency spectrum than we can hear generally speaking.
The nyquist shannon sampling theorem is the idea that as long as you capture ‘samples’ of signal (like the air pressure over time that is sound) faster that twice the period of the highest frequency component of the signal, all the information is captured and the aignal can be reproduced exactly (in theory).
maybe think of it like looking through a fence. As long as nothing on the other side of the fence is shorter than the spacing between posts, you can everything on the other side.
note that any file can be encoded as text with something like Base64
This does involve a cutoff point in the “maximum” frequency of a signal. Actual sound contains a much larger frequency spectrum than our audio file formats are designed to handle.
Sure but human hearing tends to cap out at around 24khz so a sample rate of 48khz is going to contain everything that we can hear.
Actual sound also contains a larger frequency spectrum than our ears are designed to handle. Not throwing shade, our audio file formats also contain a narrower frequency spectrum than we can hear generally speaking.
I speak incompletely because I expect others to argue and complete the conversation. No shade perceived at all.
I love the fence analogy.