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NASA NTRS · Abstract
Structural Response to Low Amplitude Sonic Booms
Attribution
This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Langley Research Center.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
Two highly instrumented homes have been ensonified by low amplitude sonic booms. The resulting measurements have been analyzed 1) to gain insight to the dominant physical acoustics associated with sonic booms heard indoors, and 2) to rank order the mechanisms needed for high quality auralizations. The mechanisms turn out to be both clear and elegant. Diffraction loading on the exterior surface is as expected with an enhancement around <i>ka</i> = 1 on the incident side of the home, and a strong shadow zone at higher non-dimensional frequencies. The resulting pressure loading induces modal vibration of the walls, ceiling and windows; each of which show their first flexural modes at frequencies below 20 Hz. The walls themselves appear to break up into multi-layered wave bearing structures around 100 Hz, above which the nonlinear contact and sliding mechanisms take on a dominant role in the signature. These insights have been combined to motivate a low dimensional tool for auralizing the complete audio bandwidth of booms heard indoors.
Authors
- Joseph R Gavin Gulfstream Aerospace
- Jacob Klos Langley Research Center
- Alexandra Loubeau Langley Research Center
- Brenda M Sullivan Lockheed Martin (United States)
Citation: Joseph R Gavin, Jacob Klos, Alexandra Loubeau , et al. (2009). Structural Response to Low Amplitude Sonic Booms. Langley Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20200010734. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20200010734 ↗