100 research outputs found

    Higher order mode propagation in nonuniform circular ducts

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    Higher order mode propagation in a nonuniform circular duct without mean flow was investigated. An approximate wave equation is derived on the assumptions that the duct cross section varies slowly and that mode conversion is negligible. Exact closed form solutions are obtained for a particular class of converging-diverging circular duct which referred to as 'circular cosh duct.' Numerical results are presented in terms of the transmission loss for the various duct shapes and frequencies. The results are applicable to multimodal propagation, single mode propagation, and sound radiation from certain types of contoured inlet ducts, or of sound propagation in a converging-diverging duct of somewhat different shape from a cosh duct

    Mode Propagation in Nonuniform Circular Ducts with Potential Flow

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    A previously reported closed form solution is expanded to determine effects of isentropic mean flow on mode propagation in a slowly converging-diverging duct, a circular cosh duct. On the assumption of uniform steady fluid density, the mean flow increases the power transmission coefficient. The increase is directly related to the increase of the cutoff ratio at the duct throat. With the negligible transverse gradients of the steady fluid variables, the conversion from one mode to another is negligible, and the power transmission coefficient remains unchanged with the mean flow direction reversed. With a proper choice of frequency parameter, many different modes can be made subject to a single value of the power transmission loss. A systematic method to include the effects of the gradients of the steady fluid variables is also described

    Singular perturbation of reduced wave equation and scattering from an embedded obstacle

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    We consider time-harmonic wave scattering from an inhomogeneous isotropic medium supported in a bounded domain ΩRN\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^N (N2N\geq 2). {In a subregion DΩD\Subset\Omega, the medium is supposed to be lossy and have a large mass density. We study the asymptotic development of the wave field as the mass density ρ+\rho\rightarrow +\infty} and show that the wave field inside DD will decay exponentially while the wave filed outside the medium will converge to the one corresponding to a sound-hard obstacle DΩD\Subset\Omega buried in the medium supported in Ω\Dˉ\Omega\backslash\bar{D}. Moreover, the normal velocity of the wave field on D\partial D from outside DD is shown to be vanishing as ρ+\rho\rightarrow +\infty. {We derive very accurate estimates for the wave field inside and outside DD and on D\partial D in terms of ρ\rho, and show that the asymptotic estimates are sharp. The implication of the obtained results is given for an inverse scattering problem of reconstructing a complex scatterer.

    A new method to explore the spectral impact of the piriform fossae on the singing voice : Benchmarking using MRI-based 3D-printed vocal tracts

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    The piriform fossae are the 2 pear-shaped cavities lateral to the laryngeal vestibule at the lower end of the vocal tract. They act acoustically as side-branches to the main tract, resulting in a spectral zero in the output of the human voice. This study investigates their spectral role by comparing numerical and experimental results of MRI-based 3D printed Vocal Tracts, for which a new experimental method (based on room acoustics) is introduced. The findings support results in the literature: the piriform fossae create a spectral trough in the region 4–5 kHz and act as formants repellents. Moreover, this study extends those results by demonstrating numerically and perceptually the impact of having large piriform fossae on the sung output
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