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Imagine sitting in a crowded café and hearing a podcast clearly while the person next to you remains blissfully unaware. No earbuds, no noise‑cancelling headband — just a pocket of sound intended for your ears alone. This sci‑fi‑sounding experience is what researchers at Penn State University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory call an “audible enclave.” Announced in March 2025, the technology uses cleverly engineered ultrasonic beams to generate audible sound only where the beams intersect. The promise of a headphone‑free, private listening experience immediately sparked curiosity in technology circles. How do these sound bubbles work, what makes them different from existing directional speakers, and could they herald an era where audio behaves like light?
For decades, audio engineers have tried to deliver sound to specific listeners without leaking audio into the surrounding space. Parametric arrays and directional speakers can send narrow sound beams, but they still radiate audible sound along…


