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Christopher K. W. Tam

Bio: Christopher K. W. Tam is an academic researcher from Florida State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Jet (fluid) & Noise (radio). The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 241 publications receiving 15532 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher K. W. Tam include California Institute of Technology & George Washington University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a set of radiation and outflow boundary conditions compatible with the DRP schemes is constructed, and a sequence of numerical simulations is conducted to test the effectiveness of the time-marching dispersion-relation-preserving (DRP) schemes.

2,202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of computational methods for computational aero-acoustics applications is presented, and some of the computational methods to be reviewed are quite different from traditional CFD methods.
Abstract: Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has made tremendous progress especially in aerodynamics and aircraft design over the past 20 years. An obvious question to ask is "why not use CFD methods to solve aeroacoustics problems?" Most aerodynamics problems are time independent, whereas aeroacoustics problems are, by definition, time dependent. The nature, characteristics, and objectives of aeroacoustics problems are also quite different from the commonly encountered CFD problems. There are computational issues that are unique to aeroacoustics. For these reasons computational aeroacoustics requires somewhat independent thinking and development. The objectives of this paper are twofold. First, issues pertinent to aeroacoustics that may or may not be relevant to computational aerodynamics are discussed. The second objective is to review computational methods developed recently that are designed especially for computational aeroacoustics applications. Some of the computational methods to be reviewed are quite different from traditional CFD methods. They should be of interest to the CFD and fluid dynamics communities.

529 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, four different approaches are used to determine experimentally the sources of jet mixing noise: spectral and directional information measured by a single microphone in the far field, fine-scale turbulence, large turbulence structures of the jet flow, and a mirror microphone is used to measure the noise source distribution along the lengths of high speed jets.
Abstract: The primary objective of this investigation is to determine experimentally the sources of jet mixing noise. In the present study, four different approaches are used. It is reasonable to assume that the characteristics of the noise sources are imprinted on their radiation fields. Under this assumption, it becomes possible to analyse the characteristics of the far-field sound and then infer back to the characteristics of the sources. The first approach is to make use of the spectral and directional information measured by a single microphone in the far field. A detailed analysis of a large collection of far-field noise data has been carried out. The purpose is to identify special characteristics that can be linked directly to those of the sources. The second approach is to measure the coherence of the sound field using two microphones. The autocorrelations and cross-correlations of these measurements offer not only valuable information on the spatial structure of the noise field in the radial and polar angle directions, but also on the sources inside the jet. The third approach involves measuring the correlation between turbulence fluctuations inside a jet and the radiated noise in the far field. This is the most direct and unambiguous way of identifying the sources of jet noise. In the fourth approach, a mirror microphone is used to measure the noise source distribution along the lengths of high-speed jets. Features and trends observed in noise source strength distributions are expected to shed light on the source mechanisms. It will be shown that all four types of data indicate clearly the existence of two distinct noise sources in jets. One source of noise is the fine-scale turbulence and the other source is the large turbulence structures of the jet flow. Some of the salient features of the sound field associated with the two noise sources are reported in this paper.

486 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1996
TL;DR: In this paper, two similarity spectra, one for the noise from the large turbulence structures/instability waves of the jet flow, the other for the fine-scale turbulence, are identified.
Abstract: It is argued that because of the lack of intrinsic length and time scales in the core part of the jet flow, the radiated noise spectrum of a high-speed jet should exhibit similarity. A careful analysis of all the axisymmetric supersonic jet noise spectra in the data-bank of the Jet Noise Laboratory of the NASA Langley Research Center has been carried out. Two similarity spectra, one for the noise from the large turbulence structures/instability waves of the jet flow, the other for the noise from the fine-scale turbulence, are identified. The two similarity spectra appear to be universal spectra for axisymmetric jets. They fit all the measured data including those from subsonic jets. Experimental evidence are presented showing that regardless of whether a jet is supersonic or subsonic the noise characteristics and generation mechanisms are the same. There is large turbulence structures/instability waves noise from subsonic jets. This noise component can be seen prominently inside the cone of silence of the fine-scale turbulence noise near the jet axis. For imperfectly expanded supersonic jets, a shock cell structure is formed inside the jet plume. Measured spectra are provided to demonstrate that the presence of a shock cell structure has little effect on the radiated turbulent mixing noise. The shape of the noise spectrum as well as the noise intensity remain practically the same as those of a fully expanded jet. However, for jets undergoing strong screeching, there is broadband noise amplification for both turbulent mixing noise components. It is discovered through a pilot study of the noise spectrum of rectangular and elliptic supersonic jets that the turbulent mixing noise of these jets is also made up of the same two noise components found in axisymmetric jets. The spectrum of each individual noise component also fits the corresponding similarity spectrum of axisymmetric jets.

459 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To the best of our knowledge, there is only one application of mathematical modelling to face recognition as mentioned in this paper, and it is a face recognition problem that scarcely clamoured for attention before the computer age but, having surfaced, has attracted the attention of some fine minds.
Abstract: to be done in this area. Face recognition is a problem that scarcely clamoured for attention before the computer age but, having surfaced, has involved a wide range of techniques and has attracted the attention of some fine minds (David Mumford was a Fields Medallist in 1974). This singular application of mathematical modelling to a messy applied problem of obvious utility and importance but with no unique solution is a pretty one to share with students: perhaps, returning to the source of our opening quotation, we may invert Duncan's earlier observation, 'There is an art to find the mind's construction in the face!'.

3,015 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of recent developments in the hydro- dynamic stability theory of spatially developing flows pertaining to absolute/convective and local/global instability concepts is presented.
Abstract: The goal of this survey is to review recent developments in the hydro­ dynamic stability theory of spatially developing flows pertaining to absolute/convective and local/global instability concepts. We wish to dem­ onstrate how these notions can be used effectively to obtain a qualitative and quantitative description of the spatio-temporal dynamics of open shear flows, such as mixing layers, jets, wakes, boundary layers, plane Poiseuille flow, etc. In this review, we only consider open flows where fluid particles do not remain within the physical domain of interest but are advected through downstream flow boundaries. Thus, for the most part, flows in "boxes" (Rayleigh-Benard convection in finite-size cells, Taylor-Couette flow between concentric rotating cylinders, etc.) are not discussed. Further­ more, the implications of local/global and absolute/convective instability concepts for geophysical flows are only alluded to briefly. In many of the flows of interest here, the mean-velocity profile is non-

1,988 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent flows has been reviewed and the complementary nature of experiments and computations in turbulence research has been illustrated, as well as how DNS has impacted turbulence modeling and provided further insight into the structure of turbulent boundary layers.
Abstract: ▪ Abstract We review the direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent flows. We stress that DNS is a research tool, and not a brute-force solution to the Navier-Stokes equations for engineering problems. The wide range of scales in turbulent flows requires that care be taken in their numerical solution. We discuss related numerical issues such as boundary conditions and spatial and temporal discretization. Significant insight into turbulence physics has been gained from DNS of certain idealized flows that cannot be easily attained in the laboratory. We discuss some examples. Further, we illustrate the complementary nature of experiments and computations in turbulence research. Examples are provided where DNS data has been used to evaluate measurement accuracy. Finally, we consider how DNS has impacted turbulence modeling and provided further insight into the structure of turbulent boundary layers.

1,572 citations

Book
01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: This updated edition includes new worked programming examples, expanded coverage and recent literature regarding incompressible flows, the Discontinuous Galerkin Method, the Lattice Boltzmann Method, higher-order spatial schemes, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and code parallelization.
Abstract: Computational Fluid Dynamics: Principles and Applications, Third Edition presents students, engineers, and scientists with all they need to gain a solid understanding of the numerical methods and principles underlying modern computation techniques in fluid dynamics By providing complete coverage of the essential knowledge required in order to write codes or understand commercial codes, the book gives the reader an overview of fundamentals and solution strategies in the early chapters before moving on to cover the details of different solution techniques This updated edition includes new worked programming examples, expanded coverage and recent literature regarding incompressible flows, the Discontinuous Galerkin Method, the Lattice Boltzmann Method, higher-order spatial schemes, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and parallelization An accompanying companion website contains the sources of 1-D and 2-D Euler and Navier-Stokes flow solvers (structured and unstructured) and grid generators, along with tools for Von Neumann stability analysis of 1-D model equations and examples of various parallelization techniques Will provide you with the knowledge required to develop and understand modern flow simulation codes Features new worked programming examples and expanded coverage of incompressible flows, implicit Runge-Kutta methods and code parallelization, among other topics Includes accompanying companion website that contains the sources of 1-D and 2-D flow solvers as well as grid generators and examples of parallelization techniques

1,228 citations