scholarly journals Excitation of normal modes of a thin elastic plate by moving dislocations

Wave Motion ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-46
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Arias ◽  
Fernando Lund
2021 ◽  
Vol 2057 (1) ◽  
pp. 012021
Author(s):  
K N Zavyalova ◽  
K A Shishmarev ◽  
E A Batyaev ◽  
T I Khabakhpasheva

Abstract Hydroelastic waves propagating along a channel covered with ice of non-uniform thickness are considered. The channel has a rectangular cross section. The fluid in the channel is inviscid and incompressible. The ice is modeled as a thin elastic plate. The ice thickness changes linearly. The problem is reduced to the problem of the wave profile across the channel, which is solved using the normal modes of an elastic beam with non-uniform thickness. It is shown that with the decrease in the change in the ice thickness, the modes approach the normal modes of an elastic beam with a constant thickness. The behavior of the dispersion relations of the hydroelastic waves depending on the parameter describing the change in the ice thickness is studied.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuhito Kawai

Abstract The prediction of sound transmission through a thin elastic plate such as a window is an important problem in the field of noise control engineering. Integral equations which express sound fields in infinite half spaces which are divided off by the baffle and the elastic plate are introduced and combined with the equation of plate vibration to solve as a coupled system. The image method is used in every equation to reduce unknown functions and boundaries which should be considered. Some numerical examples are solved numerically to examine the method.


An analysis is made of the scattering of bending waves at the edge of an unbafiled, thin elastic plate in the presence of arbitrary fluid loading. Detailed predictions are made of the sound scattered from free and clamped edges, and empirical formulae given for the radiation loss factor over a range of frequencies and fluid loadings. Application is made to the generation of sound by an aerodynamic dipole source adjacent to a finite plate, a finite length of which has been treated with damping material. The dipole models the production of sound by blade-vortex interactions occurring when turbulence or discrete vortices are ingested by a ducted rotor, in which the plate assumes the role of a neighbouring duct wall. In typical underwater applications, when the influence of fluid loading is important, sound produced by the source at frequencies below the coincidence frequency of the bending waves can propagate directly to the far field, essentially as if the plate were absent. However, flexural plate-motions are also generated by the source. These contribute to the radiation by scattering at the edges and, in the absence of dissipation in the plate, the intensity of the edge-scattered sound can dominate the direct radiation from the source. When the edges can vibrate freely, it is shown that a relatively modest amount of damping is sufficient to reduce the edge generated sound to levels below those of the direct radiation. The efficiency with which bending wave energy is converted into sound is much larger for clamped edges, and larger values of coating loss factor and length are necessary to achieve significant reductions in the structural component of the radiated sound.


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