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Bull horn


A megaphone, speaking-trumpet, bullhorn, or loud hailer is a portable, usually hand-held, cone-shaped acoustic horn used to amplify a person’s voice or other sounds and direct it in a given direction. The sound is introduced into the narrow end of the megaphone, by holding it up to the face and speaking into it, and the sound waves radiate out the wide end. A megaphone increases the volume of sound by increasing the acoustic impedance seen by the vocal cords, matching the impedance of the vocal cords to the air, so that more sound power is radiated. It also serves to direct the sound waves in the direction the horn is pointing. It somewhat distorts the sound of the voice because the frequency response of the megaphone is greater at higher sound frequencies.

Since the 1960s the voice-powered acoustic megaphone described above has been replaced by the electric megaphone, which uses electric power to amplify the voice.

The initial inventor of the speaking trumpet is a subject of historical controversy; there is a documented record that native Americans used megaphones.

There have also been references to speakers in Ancient Greece (5th Century B.C.)wearing masks with cones protruding from the mouth in order to amplify their voices. Hellenic architects may have also consciously utilized acoustic physics in their design of Amphitheaters.

A drawing by Louis Nicolas, on page 14 of the Codex canadensis, circa 1675 to 1682, is one of the earliest depictions of a megaphone. The text of the illustration translates to:

Portrait of a famous one-eyed man. This captain had one eye put out by an arrow. He was a great warrior and was the terror of many surrounding nations. He is addressing his soldiers through a birch bark tube. He urges them to pay attention to him, saying: Pissintaouik nikanissitik, Listen to me, my brothers. He was called Iscouakité, which means burning firebrand.

Nicolas sejourned in New France in 1664-1675.

Both Samuel Morland and Athanasius Kircher have been credited of inventing megaphones around the same time in the 17th century. Morland, in a work published in 1655, wrote about his experimentation with different horns. His largest megaphone consisted of over 20 feet of copper tube and could reportedly project a person's voice a mile and a half.


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