Sonification of Elephant Infrasound
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Elephants and other large mammals produce low-frequency vocalizations extending well below the 20 Hz lower limit of human hearing, a regime known as infrasound. These rumbles serve vital social and reproductive functions over distances of several kilometers, yet they are inaudible to human observers and cannot be reproduced by conventional small loudspeakers. We present a complete signal-processing pipeline that renders sub-20 Hz elephant rumbles perceptible through a small loud-speaker by exploiting the missing-fundamental psychoacoustic effect. Butterworth bandpass filters isolate the infrasonic content; a full-wave integrator nonlinear device (NLD) generates the harmonic series required for virtual pitch perception; and a hysteresis-comparator fundamental-frequency estimator normalizes the NLD output. The pipeline was validated on African elephant field recordings and deployed on a credit-card-sized, low-cost single-board computer with an infrasound microphone and a small Bluetooth loudspeaker, demonstrating live operation in the field. The processed output shows a 10 dB to 15 dB elevation in the loudspeaker’s efficient band during call segments compared with background. The system enables zoo visitors and wildlife observers to perceive elephant rumbles in real time, opening new avenues for behavioral studies and public engagement with animal communication.