Project overview
Aircraft noise severely impacts the quality of life of residents living near airports and is a problem that will become even more pressing in future, with air traffic forecast almost to double over the next two decades. One of the dominant sources of aircraft noise is jet noise, particularly during take off. Jet noise reduction technology is largely empirical and further progress depends on the better understanding of the mechanisms of sound production. In this project the physics of sound production will be explored by examining the structure and dynamics of the true sources of sound. The numerical technique involves splitting the flow-field in a jet into radiating (acoustic) and non-radiating (base-flow) components. The non-radiating base flow is obtained by filtering the Navier-Stokes equations in space and time. It is shown that for a particular choice of filter function the time filtering can be performed analytically. The base flow can then obtained by large-scale computations using spatially-filtered direct numerical simulation. The radiating component is governed by linear equations and almost entirely generated by known sources. The sources are calculated from base flow computations and they contribute only to the production of sound. We refer to these sources as the true sources of sound. We aim to produce a numerical technique to understand the physics of the noise generation process.
Staff
Other researchers
Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups
Research outputs
2012, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 131, 1959-1968
DOI: 10.1121/1.3672804
Type: article
Direct numerical simulations of low Reynolds number flow over airfoils with trailing-edge serrations
2011, Journal of Sound and Vibration
Type: article
Samuel Sinayoko, A. Agarwal & Z. Hu,
2011, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 668, 335-350
Type: article
L.E. Jones, N.D. Sandham & R.D. Sandberg,
2010, AIAA Journal, 48(10)
DOI: 10.2514/1.J050345
Type: article