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How Surround Sound Works

Consumers demand realistic entertainment and surround sound plays a big part in delivering an engaging

experience. Learn how surround sound works in this Webopedia guide.

Surround Sound is the term commonly used to describe a system in which the sound output appears to surround the

listener — that is, the technology gives the impression that sounds are coming from all possible directions.

Surround Sound Creates a Realistic and Engaging Experience

Surround sound is a way to provide a more realistic and engaging experience. Sitting in front of your television or

playing a computer gamewith basic $10 stereospeakers plugged in will provide you with sound. You hear the music,

voices and other sounds coming to you from straight ahead. Using a surround sound system, however, you'll hear

variances in the sound and and it will be presented to you from different directions. For example, the car driving off

screen will sound like it is coming from the left. While playing a 3D shooter game, the rocket gun blasts sound as if

they are being shot from overhead or grenades sound like they are exploding at ground level.

Today consumers demand immersive entertainment and surround sound plays a big part in delivering an engaging

entertainment experience. To this end, there's no lack of options when it comes to surround sound technology and

systems.

How Surround Sound Works


All technical aspects aside, surround sound works because multiple audio channels are received

through speakersthat are positioned at various locations in the room. This is programmed into the source and the

sound tracks are decoded when the source is played. While this may seem simplistic, it is important to remember that

sound systems started out with monophonic sound, a single channel system. In monophonic (mono) sound systems,

the signal sent to the sound system is encoded as one single stream of sound — and the sound is usually received
through a single speaker.
Advancements led to stereophonic sound (stereo) where the sound was split between two channels, left and right.

Stereo sound enabled listeners to hear some ambiance of the production — for example, a recording of a live concert

in stereo where you begin to hear playback from extraneous noises at the performance. Surround sound takes it a

step further by producing a live-quality effect. If you're at an actual concert, you hear sound from behind you, and

listening to a recording in surround can produce the effect of this noise — coming from behind you, or to the right, or

even from above and moving down.

Surround sound adds realism and a new field of depth to your listening experience. This is accomplished not only

because you have more speakers for output, but because the sound recording itself contains more audio channels.

The A/V (audio/video) Receiver


At the heart of every home theater is an audio/video receiver (A/V). Using a DVD movie as an example, the audio is

encoded when the DVD is produced by packing multiple audio channels into a compressed format for storage. When

you play the DVD movie, your DVD player or A/V receiver (commonly called a a home theater receiver) decodes the

encoding scheme (i.e. Dolby Pro Logic II for example). Decoding capabilities of an A/V receiver are built in. Most A/V

receivers today can decode Dolby Digital and Digital Theater Sound (DTS), while higher-end receivers may also

include DTS-ES or THX Surround. Today's A/V receivers allow you to control the video source and other video

options, but for sound you'll need it to route the sound from different sources (TV, DVD, VHS), control bass, treble,

and volume. You can amplify signals to the speakers, and modern A/V receivers also handle the all-important

surround sound decoding.

5.1, 6.1 and 7.1 Channel Surround Sound Systems


Both Dolby Digital and DTS are 5.1 channel formats. 5.1 surround sound is a multichannel sound technology that

produces five channels of sound in the left, right, center, left-surround and right-surround positions. These five

channels are the minimum required to produce 5.1 surround sound. The .1 represents the channel for LFE (low

frequency effects), which is usually sent to a subwoofer.


While 5.1 surround sound has been the standard for some time now, newer A/V receivers are capable of

delivering6.1 surround sound. 6.1 multichannel sound technology uses the same set-up as a 5.1 system, but it has

the addition of a sixth speaker that takes the rear-center surround position (or back surround position) to provide a

more 3-D sound. 6.1 surround sound uses extended surround sound formats, such as THX Surround EX and DTS-

ES.

Moving forward, we now also have 7.1 surround sound, which splits the single rear-center speaker into individual left-

and right-rear surround. These systems are not a true discrete 7.1 channel system as 7.1 formats don't currently

exist. In a true discrete 6.1 surround system, the back center surround position is separate from the surround left and

surround right positions. A 7.1 channel system uses matrixed extended surround where the left-back and right-back

(rear-center surround) multichannel are blended together and stored.


10.2 Surround Sound
Developed by THX, the name itself, 10.2 is an obvious marketing play on 5.1 (10.2 is twice as good as 5.1). In a 10.2

surround sound 14 channels are used. This includes five front speakers, five surround channels, Two LFE and two

height, plus the addition of a second sub-woofer. 10.2 Surround Sound was an experiment conducted by Tomlinson

Holman in December 2007. You can read the experiment details here.

Common Surround Sound Formats


Dolby Surround
Dolby Surround is the consumer version of the original Dolby multichannel analog film sound format — Dolby analog

and Dolby SR (Spectral Recording). When a Dolby Surround soundtrack is produced, four channels of audio

information (left, center, right and mono) surround are matrix-encoded onto two audio tracks. These two tracks are

then carried on stereo program sources such as videotapes and TV broadcasts into the home where they can be
decoded by Dolby Pro Logic to recreate the original four-channel surround sound experience.
Dolby Digital
A standard for high-quality digital audio that is used for the sound portion of video stored in digital format, especially

videos stored on DVD-ROMs. Dolby Digital delivers six channels in the so-called "5:1" configuration: left, right, and

center screen channels, separate left and right sounds, and a subwoofer channel. This is sometimes called surround

sound or 3D sound.
Dolby Digital EX
Dolby Digital EX takes the Dolby Digital 5.1-channel setup one step further with an additional center-surround

channel (reproduced through one or two speakers) for extra dimensional detail and an enveloping surround-sound

effect. Feature films originally released in Dolby Digital Surround EX (the cinema version) carry the encoded extra

surround channel in their subsequent DVD releases, as well as onto 5.1-channel digital satellite and TV broadcasts.
Dolby Pro Logic IIx
Dolby Pro Logic IIx is an extension of Dolby Pro Logic II technology. This sophisticated algorithm processes native
stereo- and 5.1-channel material to produce 6.1 or 7.1 output channels. Dolby Pro Logic IIx expands choice in

playback system configuration (allowing 5.1 , 6.1, or 7.1 playback channels) and, when incorporated into an

audio/video (AV) receiver or processor it allows a convenient upgrade path from a traditional 5.1-channel sound

system to 7.1 output channels.


Dolby TrueHD
Dolby TrueHD is the next-generation lossless technology developed for high-definition disc-based media. Features of

Dolby TrueHD include the following: 100 percent lossless coding technology, up to 18 Mbps bit rate, support for up to

eight full-range channels of 24-bit/96 kHz audio, and it is supported by High-Definition Media Interface (HDMI).
DTS
Short for Digital Theater Sound, it is a multichannel surround sound format used in both commercial and consumer
applications. DTS was created by the company for which the technology was named, Digital Theater Systems (which

is now called DTS as well). DTS is a competing technology with Dolby Digital.
DTS-ES
Short for Digital Theater Sound - Extended Surround. The 6.1 matrixed system enables cinemas to deliver extreme

spatial effects that literally surround the audience. A rack mounting DTS-ES decoder creates a back-surround (BS)

channel from encoded surround tracks, in typical theatre applications feeding a back-surround speaker array

(configured as left-back-wall and right-back-wall for stereo operation). The system is compatible with all current

extended surround formats and an auxiliary surround channel is also provided for other applications. ES modes can

be selected via automation inputs or via the built-in DTS time code reader, which detects ES serial numbers for

automatic DTS-ES playback.


TruSurround XT
TruSurround XT is the second generation of SRS TruSurround. Building upon its patented predecessor, TruSurround

XT solves the problem of playing 5.1 or 6.1 multichannel content over two speakers (or headphones). TruSurround

XT accepts input from up to a seven-channel (6.1) audio source and processing a two-channel output. When

receiving multichannel content, TruSurround XT virtualizes the channels, creating "phantom" speakers that appear to

extend all around the listener. When receiving mono or stereo content, TruSurround XT presents an expansive three

dimensional sound field.


Did You Know...?
Despite the fact that IMAX cinemas use more than 300 speakers, the movies have only a six-channel digital
sound track.

Based in Nova Scotia, Vangie Beal is has been writing about technology for more than a decade. She is a frequent

contributor to EcommerceGuide and managing editor at Webopedia. You can tweet her online @AuroraGG.

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