Noise Pollution: Definition, Sources & Types - What's That Racket?
- Definition: Noise is any unwanted, unpleasant, or disturbing sound. Noise pollution refers to harmful or annoying levels of noise.
⭐ Noise is often defined as "unwanted sound" or "sound without value."
- Sources:
- Industrial: Machinery, manufacturing plants.
- Transport: Road traffic (cars, buses, motorcycles), railways, aircraft.
- Community/Domestic: Loudspeakers, public events, household appliances, construction activities.
- Agricultural: Tractors, farm equipment.
- Types of Noise:
- Continuous: Uninterrupted sound (e.g., factory hum, ventilation systems).
- Intermittent: Sound levels vary significantly over time (e.g., passing traffic, aircraft flyovers).
- Impulsive/Impact: Short bursts of high-intensity sound (e.g., explosions, hammer blows, gunshots).

Noise Pollution: Measurement & Standards - Decibel Deciphered
- Unit: Decibel (dB), a logarithmic scale.
- Measurement: Sound Level Meter with frequency weighting networks.
- dBA: Mimics human ear response; common for environmental/occupational noise.
- dBC: For louder sounds, measures peak pressures.
- Key dB Facts:
- 0 dB: Faintest audible sound (ref: $20 \mu Pa$ ).
- ↑ 3 dB: Sound intensity doubles.
- ↑ 6 dB: Sound pressure doubles.
- ↑ 10 dB: Perceived loudness doubles (approx.); sound intensity ↑ 10x.
- Pain threshold: ~120-140 dB.
- Standards: Governed by CPCB (India) & WHO.
⭐ Doubling of sound pressure level corresponds to a 6 dB increase, while doubling of sound intensity is a 3 dB increase.
Noise Pollution: Health Impacts - Ears & Beyond Harm

A. Auditory Effects:
- Temporary Threshold Shift (TTS): Reversible hearing loss after noise exposure.
- Permanent Threshold Shift (PTS) / Noise-Induced Hearing Loss (NIHL): Irreversible damage to cochlear hair cells, often from chronic exposure >85 dB.
- Characterized by sensory-neural hearing loss.
- Tinnitus: Ringing or buzzing in ears.
- Acoustic Trauma: Sudden hearing loss from intense, brief noise (e.g., explosion >140 dB).
B. Non-Auditory Effects:
- Cardiovascular: ↑Blood pressure, ↑heart rate, vasoconstriction, increased risk of hypertension & Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD).
- Endocrine: ↑Stress hormones (cortisol, adrenaline).
- Sleep Disturbances: Difficulty falling asleep, ↓sleep quality, awakenings.
- Mental Health: Annoyance, irritation, anxiety, depression, ↓cognitive performance, ↓concentration.
- Communication Interference: Difficulty understanding speech.
- Productivity: ↓Work efficiency.
⭐ Noise-Induced Hearing Loss (NIHL) characteristically shows a V-shaped dip at 4000 Hz (Boilermaker's notch / C5 dip) on an audiogram, often sparing lower frequencies initially. This is a classic exam question!
Noise Pollution: Prevention & Control - Sound Barrier Tactics
- Units: dB(A); $L_{eq}$ (equivalent continuous sound level).
- Control Hierarchy (Source → Path → Receiver):
- Source Control: Elimination, Substitution (quieter machines).
- Path Control (Sound Barrier Tactics):
- Physical Barriers: Walls, berms, enclosures. Materials: dense, non-porous.
- Green Belts: Trees & shrubs absorb/diffuse sound.
- Building Design: Strategic layout, sound-insulating materials.
- Receiver Control:
- Administrative: Limit exposure time, quiet zones.
- PPE: Earplugs, earmuffs (Noise Reduction Rating - NRR).

⭐ The Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules, 2000 (India) mandates ambient noise standards (e.g., Residential: 55 dB(A) Leq day, 45 dB(A) Leq night). Silence Zones (area 100m around hospitals, courts, educational institutions) have stricter limits: 50 dB(A) Leq day, 40 dB(A) Leq night.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Permissible noise levels (Day/Night): Residential (55/45 dB), Silence Zones (50/40 dB).
- Sound intensity is measured in decibels (dB), a logarithmic scale.
- Health impacts: Auditory (TTS, PTS) and Non-auditory (hypertension, sleep disturbance, annoyance).
- NIHL from prolonged exposure above 85 dB; characteristic 4 kHz audiometric dip.
- Temporary Threshold Shift (TTS) is reversible; Permanent Threshold Shift (PTS) is irreversible.
- Key legislation: Noise Pollution (Regulation & Control) Rules, 2000.
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