Imagine you're talking to a friend, and your voice makes the air around you vibrate like waves in water. A microphone catches those vibrations and turns them into electricity so your phone can play it back or save it as a message.
How It Works
Inside the microphone is something called a diaphragm, it's like a tiny drum that moves when sound hits it. When the diaphragm moves, it creates changes in electricity, which are then sent to another device, like your phone or speaker.
Examples
- Your voice makes the air vibrate like a drum, and the microphone turns that into electricity your phone can understand.
- A microphone inside your smart speaker listens to your commands and sends them as electrical signals to play music.
- When you sing into a karaoke machine, it uses the microphone's magic to make your song sound clear.
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See also
- How Does a Smartphone Recognize Your Face?
- Why Do We Use Passwords for Security?
- Why Do We Use ‘Barcodes’ on Products and How Do They Work?
- How does the latest generation of brain-computer interfaces function?
- How Did the Internet Begin?
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Categories: Technology · microphones,sound waves,electricity,acoustics