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This unique outline of the basic principles and methods for prediction and control of noise and vibration from ventilation systems includes developments on flow-generated noise prediction, assessment methods for the performance of vibration isolation, noise control using periodic Helmholtz resonators, and psychoacoustic assessment.

Produktbeschreibung
This unique outline of the basic principles and methods for prediction and control of noise and vibration from ventilation systems includes developments on flow-generated noise prediction, assessment methods for the performance of vibration isolation, noise control using periodic Helmholtz resonators, and psychoacoustic assessment.
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Autorenporträt
Cheuk Ming Mak is a professor at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, specialising in acoustics and building environments. He obtained his bachelor's degree and PhD from the University of Liverpool and earned a diploma in Acoustics and Noise Control from the Institute of Acoustics (UK) after receiving his undergraduate degree. He has been conducting research on noise and vibration from ventilation systems and their effects on people for more than 30 years. Kuen Wai Ma is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. He obtained his PhD degree in psychoacoustics from the University of Hong Kong in 2020 after earning a BSc degree in physics from the Chinese University of Hong Kong. His doctoral and postdoctoral research focused on the characterisation, statistical modelling and prediction of human perceptual responses to different types of indoor and outdoor environments. Hai Ming Wong is a clinical professor at the University of Hong Kong, specialising in paediatric dentistry and the effects of noise on health and comfort. She obtained her Doctor of Dental Surgery from Chung Shan Medical University, her master of dental science in paediatric dentistry from the University of Liverpool and her PhD and advanced diploma in paediatric dentistry from the University of Hong Kong. She has been conducting numerous studies to link the noise problem to increased anxiety.