The near and far acoustic fields of broadband shock associated noise
Abstract
A stochastic model theory is presented which suggests that the broadband shock associated noise of supersonic jets is generated by the weak interaction between downstream propagating large turbulence structures and the quasiperiodic shock cells in the jet plume. The large turbulence structures are modelled by a superposition of the intrinsic instability waves of the mean flow of the jet, and the quasiperiodic shock cells are broken down into time-independent waveguide modes of the jet flow using multiple scales expansion. The observed broadband shock associated noise consists of a superposition of the spectra generated by the different waveguide modes. Starting from the equations of motion of a compressible fluid, formulas for calculating the far field and near field noise are developed. Good general agreement is found with previous results.
- Publication:
-
Thermophysical Aspects of Re-entry Flows
- Pub Date:
- July 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986aiaa.confQ....T
- Keywords:
-
- Aeroacoustics;
- Aerodynamic Noise;
- Far Fields;
- Near Fields;
- Shock Waves;
- Stochastic Processes;
- Supersonic Jet Flow;
- Broadband;
- Compressible Fluids;
- Directivity;
- Inviscid Flow;
- Sound Fields;
- Sound Pressure;
- Acoustics