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Experimental investigation of outdoor propagation of finite‐amplitude noise

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TLDR
In this paper, the outdoor propagation of finite amplitude acoustic waves was investigated using a conventional electroacoustic transmitter which was mounted on the ground and pointed upward in order to avoid ground reflection effects.
Abstract
The outdoor propagation of finite amplitude acoustic waves was investigated using a conventional electroacoustic transmitter which was mounted on the ground and pointed upward in order to avoid ground reflection effects. The propagation path was parallel to a radio tower 85 m tall, whose elevator carried the receiving microphone. The observations and conclusions are as follows: (1) At the higher source levels nonlinear propagation distortion caused a strong generation of high frequency noise over the propagation path. For example, at 70 m for a frequency 2-3 octaves above the source noise band, the measured noise was up to 30 dB higher than the linear theory prediction. (2) The generation occurred in both the nearfield and the farfield of the transmitter. (3) At no measurement point was small-signal behavior established for the high requency noise. Calculations support the contention that the nonlinearity generated high frequency noise never becomes small-signal in its behavior, regardless of distance. (4) When measured spectra are scaled in frequency and level to make them comparable with spectra of actual jet noise, they are found to be well within the jet noise range. It is therefore entirely possible that nonlinear distortion affects jet noise.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of nonlinear effects in the propagation of noise from high-power jet aircraft.

TL;DR: Measurements of the F-22A Raptor during static engine run-ups show that significant nonlinear propagation effects occur for even intermediate-thrust engine conditions and at angles well away from the peak radiation angle, which suggests that these effects are likely to be common in the propagation of noise radiated by high-power aircraft.
Journal ArticleDOI

On cumulative nonlinear acoustic waveform distortions from high-speed jets

TL;DR: In this article, a model for predicting the presence of cumulative nonlinear distortions in the acoustic waveforms produced by high-speed jet flows is proposed based on the conventional definition of the acoustic shock formation distance and employs an effective Gol’dberg number for diverging acoustic waves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear waves and one-dimensional turbulence in nondispersive media

TL;DR: The main results of the theory based on the solution of Burgers' equation for large Reynolds numbers are reviewed in this article, which is an example of strong turbulence, and its relation to hydrodynamic turbulence are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-linear propagation of broadband noise signals

TL;DR: In this article, Taylor series solutions to a generalized Burgers' equation are generated for stationary noise signals, and the expansions are in powers of the range variable, and any frequency dependence of attenuation and dispersion is allowed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Nonlinear Modeling of F/A-18E Noise Propagation

TL;DR: In this paper, a split-step solution to a Mendousse-Burgers equation that includes the effects of quadratic nonlinearity, atmospheric absorption and dispersion, and geometrical spreading was developed to study the nonlinear propagation of high-amplitude jet noise.
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