Analytical solutions for the acoustic field in a thin annular duct with temperature gradient and mean flow

2020 ◽  
Vol 467 ◽  
pp. 115043 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingxuan Li ◽  
Jiaqi Nan ◽  
Lijun Yang
2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (11) ◽  
pp. 2533-2546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes Becherer ◽  
James N. Moum

AbstractA scheme for significantly reducing data sampled on turbulence devices (χpods) deployed on remote oceanographic moorings is proposed. Each χpod is equipped with a pitot-static tube, two fast-response thermistors, a three-axis linear accelerometer, and a compass. In preprocessing, voltage means, variances, and amplitude of the subrange (inertial-convective subrange of the turbulence) of the voltage spectrum representing the temperature gradient are computed. Postprocessing converts voltages to engineering units, in particular mean flow speed (and velocity), temperature, temperature gradient, and the rate of destruction of the temperature variance χ from which other turbulence quantities, such as heat flux, are derived. On 10-min averages, this scheme reduces the data by a factor of roughly 24 000 with a small (5%) low bias compared to complete estimates using inertial-convective subrange scaling of calibrated temperature gradient spectra.


1977 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. F. Balsa

Lighthill, in his elegant and classic theory of jet noise, showed that the far-field acoustic pressure of noise generated by turbulence is proportional to the integral over the jet volume of the second time derivative of the Lighthill stress tensor, the integrand being evaluated at a retarded time. The purpose of this paper is to generalize the above results to include the effects of mean flow (velocity and temperature) surrounding the source of sound. It is shown quite generally that the integrand is now a certain functional of the Lighthill stress tensor evaluated at a retarded time. More important, however, at low and high frequencies this functional assumes an extremely simple form, so that the acoustic field can once more be given by integrals of the time derivatives of the Lighthill tensor. Both the self- and the shear-noise contributions to the pressure are evaluated.


2011 ◽  
Vol 689 ◽  
pp. 279-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuesong Wu

AbstractIn two previous papers (Wu, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 453, 2002, p. 289, and Wu & Hogg, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 550, 2006, p. 307), a formal asymptotic procedure was developed to calculate the sound radiated by unsteady boundary-layer flows that are described by the triple-deck theory. That approach requires lengthy calculations, and so is now improved to construct a simpler composite theory, which retains the capacity of systematically identifying and approximating the relevant sources, but also naturally includes the effect of mean-flow refraction and more importantly the back action of the emitted sound on the source itself. The combined effect of refraction and back action is represented by an ‘impedance coefficient’, and the present analysis yields an analytical expression for this parameter, which was usually introduced on a semi-empirical basis. The expression indicates that for Mach number $M= O(1)$, the mean-flow refraction and back action of the sound have a leading-order effect on the acoustic field within the shallow angles to the streamwise directions. A parametric study suggests that the back effect of sound is actually appreciable in a sizeable portion of the acoustic field for $M\gt 0. 5$, becomes more pronounced, and eventually influences the entire acoustic field in the transonic limit. In the supersonic regime, the acoustic field is characterized by distinctive Mach-wave beams, which exert a leading-order influence on the source. The analysis also indicates that acoustic radiation in the subsonic and supersonic regimes is fundamentally different. In the subsonic regime, the sound is produced by small-wavenumber components of the hydrodynamic motion, and can be characterized by acoustic multipoles, whereas in the supersonic regime, broadband finite-wavenumber components of the hydrodynamic motion contribute and the concept of a multipolar source becomes untenable. The global acoustic feedback loop is investigated using a model consisting of two well-separated roughness elements, in which the sound wave emitted due to the scattering of a Tollmien–Schlichting (T–S) wave by the downstream roughness propagates upstream and impinges on the upstream roughness to regenerate the T–S wave. Numerical calculations suggest that at high Reynolds numbers and for moderate roughness heights, the long-range acoustic coupling may lead to global instability, which is characterized by self-sustained oscillations at discrete frequencies. The dominant peak frequency may jump from one value to another as the Reynolds number or the distance between the roughness elements is varied gradually.


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