RT60
The time it takes for sound to decay by 60 decibels after the source stops.
RT60 (Reverberation Time 60) is the standard metric for measuring how long sound persists in a room after the source stops. Specifically, it measures the time required for sound pressure level to decrease by 60 dB.
This measurement is fundamental to understanding room acoustics because it directly affects speech intelligibility, music clarity, and overall acoustic comfort. A room with a long RT60 sounds "reverberant" or "live," while a short RT60 creates a "dead" or "dry" acoustic environment.
RT60 varies with frequency. Low frequencies typically decay more slowly than high frequencies in untreated rooms. Professional acoustic analysis measures RT60 across multiple frequency bands (typically 125 Hz to 4 kHz) to fully characterize a space.
Formula
RT60 = 0.161 × V / A- V = Room Volume (m³)
- A = Total Absorption (Sabins (m²))
- 0.161 = Constant (seconds/meter)
Practical Example
For a 50 m³ room with 11 Sabins of absorption
RT60 = 0.161 × 50 / 11 = 0.73 secondsThis is too reverberant for mixing (target 0.3-0.4s). Adding absorption panels would reduce RT60.
Standards: ISO 3382-1:2009, ISO 3382-2:2008
Related Terms
Sabine Equation · Absorption Coefficient · Schroeder Frequency
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