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Why Asphalt
| Measuring Noise | |||
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The first documented noise regulation in the world dates back to 44 BC when Julius Caesar declared: "...no wheeled vehicle whatsoever will be allowed within the precincts of the city, from sunrise until the hour before dusk..." Back then, the ruler of Rome didn't have a team of engineers with technical instruments to help him assess the road noise-he just felt it was too loud and did something about it.
Times have changed and technology has evolved. It wasn't until the last century, in 1924, when a group of engineers working at Bell Telephone Laboratories invented a measurement and a scale that would help the world quantify the measure of sound. The team devised a new unit of measure called the decibel (dB), named in honor of the laboratory's founder and telecommunications pioneer Alexander Graham Bell. Later, the (A) was added to denote decibel levels for the human ear. What is loud? The answer is: everyone hears differently. To understand this better we have to follow one simple rule-there is no precise definition of what is loud because the perception of loudness (or noise) is different for everyone. Julius Caesar thought the sound of horse-drawn carriages and fruit carts being pulled through Rome was so unpleasing that he created a new law. Can you image what he might do today if he heard the sound of a 12-lane highway at rush-hour? Think about the last time you were walking down the street and a fire engine roared by with its siren turned on. At 100 dB(A) or more, a fire engine is a significant contributor to noise pollution. If the same fire engine passed by with a siren10 dB(A) higher than the first one, you might think the noise you are hearing is two fire engines, not one. So the definition of loudness (or -- the definition of "loud") is really up to you. Can you stand in front of speakers at a rock concert listening to 120 decibels for three hours? Or do you prefer the sound of a 60 decibel conversation with a friend? How long can you mix something in a blender at 80 decibels? That's right-it's all up to you and how you hear.
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About Asphalt
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Asphalt is one of the indispensable materials of life in America. Want proof? Think about the fact that 94 percent of the paved roads in America are surfaced with asphalt. |



