Silence
is golden, as they say. And while it may not be worth quite as much as
jewels and gold to most people, it certainly was the primary
goal for those who built the quietest room in the world. Located at Microsoft’s
headquarters in Redmond, Washington, the lab room measures a background noise
of -20.35 dBA, which is 20 decibels below the threshold of human hearing and
breaks previous records for spaces that were deemed the planet’s quietest
places, according to CNN.
"As soon as one enters the room, one immediately feels a
strange and unique sensation which is hard to describe," Hundraj
Gopal, a speech and hearing scientist and principal designer of the
anechoic chamber at Microsoft, told CNN. "Most people find the absence of
sound deafening, feel a sense of fullness in the ears, or some ringing. Very
faint sounds become clearly audible because the ambient noise is exceptionally
low. When you turn your head, you can hear that motion. You can hear yourself
breathing and it sounds somewhat loud."



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