Inverse Square Law Calculator for Sound
The inverse square law states that sound pressure level decreases by 6 dB for each doubling of distance from a point source in free-field conditions. SonaVyx calculates SPL at any distance given a reference measurement, accounts for atmospheric absorption at high frequencies per ISO 9613-1, and corrects for directivity factor to provide accurate level predictions for sound system design and noise assessment.
Try It Now
Measure actual SPL at your position to verify the calculation.
Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Value | Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Rule | -6 dB per doubling of distance | Free-field point source |
| Formula | SPL2 = SPL1 - 20*log10(d2/d1) | ISO 9613-2 |
| Atmospheric Absorption | Per ISO 9613-1 (temp, humidity) | Significant above 2 kHz |
| Directivity Factor | Q = 1 (free) to Q = 8 (corner) | Half-space, quarter-space |
| Distance Range | 0.1 m to 10 km | Near field to far field |
| Temperature | -20 C to +50 C | ISO 9613-1 Table 1 |
| Humidity | 10% to 100% RH | ISO 9613-1 Table 1 |
How to Calculate SPL at Distance
Enter Reference SPL
Input the known sound pressure level at a reference distance. Loudspeaker specifications typically list sensitivity at 1 meter with 1 watt (or 2.83V) input. If you have a measurement at any distance, enter that value and distance as your reference.
Set Target Distance
Enter the distance at which you want to know the SPL. For concert venues, this might be 30-100 meters. For environmental noise assessment, distances can extend to several kilometers. The calculator handles both short and long ranges.
Adjust for Environment
Select the directivity factor: Q=1 for suspended in free air, Q=2 for on a large surface (ground), Q=4 for at a wall-floor junction, Q=8 for in a corner. Directivity factor adds up to 9 dB at Q=8 compared to free-field.
Include Atmospheric Absorption
For distances beyond 50 meters, atmospheric absorption becomes significant especially above 2 kHz. Enter temperature and humidity for per-frequency absorption calculation per ISO 9613-1. At 8 kHz in dry conditions, absorption can reach 0.1 dB per meter.
Understanding Sound Propagation
Sound propagation in the real world involves more than just the inverse square law. While the 6 dB per doubling rule is fundamental, actual sound levels at distance depend on source directivity, ground absorption, atmospheric conditions, barriers, and wind and temperature gradients. For accurate predictions beyond 100 meters, ISO 9613-2 provides a comprehensive calculation method incorporating all these factors.
Atmospheric Absorption by Frequency
Air absorbs sound through viscous and thermal losses and molecular relaxation of oxygen and nitrogen. The absorption coefficient in dB/meter depends on frequency, temperature, humidity, and barometric pressure. At 1 kHz, absorption is typically 0.005 dB/m. At 4 kHz, it rises to 0.02 dB/m. At 8 kHz, it reaches 0.05 dB/m in standard conditions. Over long distances, this dramatically reduces high-frequency content, which is why distant thunder sounds only like a low rumble.
Practical Applications
Sound system designers use inverse square law calculations to determine how much SPL a speaker system needs to produce to achieve the target level at the farthest audience position. Environmental consultants use it to predict noise levels at nearby residences from industrial sources. Event planners use it to ensure compliance with local noise ordinances at property boundaries. In all cases, the calculation starts with a known source level and predicts the received level at the distance of interest.
SPL Calculator Comparison
| Feature | SonaVyx | Smaart v9 | REW | OSM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPL distance calculation | Yes | No | No | No |
| Atmospheric absorption | Yes (ISO 9613-1) | No | No | No |
| Directivity factor | Q=1/2/4/8 | No | No | No |
| Multi-frequency | Yes (per octave band) | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Browser-based | Yes | No | No | No |
| Price | Free | $898 | Free | Free |
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Tools & Resources
Standards References
- ISO 9613-1:1993 — Attenuation of sound during propagation outdoors: Calculation of atmospheric absorption
- ISO 9613-2:1996 — Attenuation of sound during propagation outdoors: General method of calculation
- IEC 61672-1:2013 — Sound level meters: Specifications (SPL measurement reference)
- ANSI S1.26-2014 — Calculation of the absorption of sound by the atmosphere