The aeroacoustic characteristics of a coaxial system with teetering rotors in level forward °ight are com-
pared to those of an equivalent articulated single rotor with the same solidity. A lifting line representation
of the blade aerodynamics is coupled to Brown's Vorticity Transport Model to simulate the aerodynam-
ics of the rotor systems. The acoustic ¯eld is determined using the Ffowcs Williams-Hawkings equation.
Acoustic analysis shows that the principal contribution to noise radiated by both the coaxial and equivalent
single rotor systems is at the fundamental blade passage frequency, but that the coaxial rotor generates
higher sound pressure levels (by 10 dB for the evaluated con¯gurations) than the equivalent single rotor
at all °ight speeds. The sources of blade vortex interaction (BVI) noise are investigated and the principal
BVI events are identi¯ed. For the coaxial rotor, the most intense impulsive noise is seen to be generated
by the inter-rotor BVI on the advancing side of the lower rotor. The impulsive noise that is generated by
blade vortex interactions for the equivalent single rotor reduces in amplitude as the strength of BVI events
on the rotor decreases with forward speed. Conversely, the BVI noise of the coaxial rotor intensi¯es with
increasing °ight speed due to the increasing strength of the interaction between the wake of the upper rotor
and the blades of the lower rotor. The impulsive noise due to BVI for the coaxial rotor is found to be higher
by 20{35 dB compared to the equivalent single rotor. The overall and impulsive noise characteristics of
the coaxial system are found to be weakly sensitive to changes in rotor separation and the relative phasing
of the rotors