High-intensity rocket noise: Nonlinear propagation, atmospheric absorption, and characterization
Sally Anne McInerny and Semih M. Ölçmen
Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, The University of Alabama, P.O. Box 870280, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0280
(Received 24 August 2004; revised 1 November 2004; accepted 6 November 2004)
Analyses of rocket noise data measured at far-field locations during the launch of a large rocket and a smaller rocket are presented. Weak shocks are present in all of the data sets. In order to characterize these shocks, those segments of the waveforms where the acoustic pressure is increasing are isolated and the rate of increase in pressure plotted versus magnitude of pressure rise. The plots follow a trend consistent with random noise at low values of pressure rise, then transition to the pressure-squared dependence expected for weak shocks at higher pressure rise values. Power spectral densities of the noise during the period of maximum overall sound-pressure levels display high- and low-frequency spectral slopes that are close to those predicted for shock-dominated noise. It is concluded that shocks must be included in propagation models if high frequency levels are to be estimated as a function of distance from the source. Initial shock thicknesses will have to be characterized experimentally and will require instrumentation with a bandwidth well in excess of 20 kHz. Reflection-free data are essential if meaningful assessments of the statistical properties of the noise are to be made. ©2005 Acoustical Society of America.
I might just to buy this one. :(
I really dislike the idea of inefficient professional/standards/research organizations that charge for access to papers. Some conferences and journals these days are start to move to free web access, but many others don't show signs of budging. If I ever get in a position of stability (i.e., tenure) at a university someday, one goal is to make sure everything I want to be accessible is really accessible. That includes stopping submitting anything to IEEE, the main lock-it-up entity in my field.
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