1 part in 200 ?
Are you joking ?
Graham
I don't know if a microsecond would be audible, but I'm sure that
picoseconds can't be. Brownian motion pounding on a microphone
element, or on your eardrum, has got to wobble things more than that,
not to mention the s/n of the whole signal chain. Try quantizing the
effects of vibration of your walls as it affects echoes... you'll
easily get nanoseconds.
As I said, jitter doesn't raise the quiet noise floor; it just
extracts a bit of what signal energy is present, and spreads it around
the spectrum. You'd have to be able to hear that low-level grass
scores of dB below the instantaneous program material. The paper cited
here misses this entirely.
John