Journal of Engineering and Technological Sciences
Vol 35, No 1 (2003)

Surface Vibration Reconstruction using Inverse Numerical Acoustics

Martinus, F. ( Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Kentucky 151 RGAN Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0503, USA)
Herrin, D. W. ( Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Kentucky 151 RGAN Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0503, USA)
Seybert, A. F. ( Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Kentucky 151 RGAN Building, Lexington, KY 40506-0503, USA)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 Dec 2013

Abstract

This paper explores the use of inverse numerical acoustics to reconstruct the surface vibration of a noise source. Inverse numerical acoustics is mainly used for source identification. This approach uses the measured sound pressure at a set of field points and the Helmholtz integral equation to reconstruct the normal surface velocity. The number of sound pressure measurements is considerably less than the number of surface vibration nodes. An overview of inverse numerical acoustics is presented and compared with other holography techniques such as nearfield acoustical holography and the Helmholtz equation least squares method. In order to obtain an acceptable reproduction of the surface vibration, several critical factors such as the field point selection and the effect of experimental errors have to be handled properly. Other practical considerations such as the use of few measured velocities and regularization techniques will also be presented. Examples will include a diesel engine, a transmission housing and an engine cover.

Copyrights © 2003






Journal Info

Abbrev

JETS

Publisher

Subject

Engineering

Description

Journal of Engineering and Technological Sciences welcomes full research articles in the area of Engineering Sciences from the following subject areas: Aerospace Engineering, Biotechnology, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Engineering Physics, Environmental ...