Development of a Transient Acoustic Boundary Element Method to Predict the Noise Signature of Swimming Fish

ORAL

Abstract

Animals have evolved flexible wings and fins to efficiently and quietly propel themselves through the air and water. The design of quiet and efficient bio-inspired propulsive concepts requires a rapid, unified computational framework that integrates three essential features: the fluid mechanics, the elastic structural response, and the noise generation. This study focuses on the development, validation, and demonstration of a transient, two-dimensional acoustic boundary element solver accelerated by a fast multipole algorithm. The resulting acoustic solver is used to characterize the acoustic signature produced by a vortex street advecting over a NACA 0012 airfoil, which is representative of vortex-body interactions that occur in schools of swimming fish. Both 2S and 2P canonical vortex streets generated by fish are investigated over the range of Strouhal number $0.2< St <0.4$, and the acoustic signature of the airfoil is quantified. This study provides the first estimate of the noise signature of a school of swimming fish.

Authors

  • Nathan Wagenhoffer

    Lehigh Unviersity

  • Keith W. Moored

    Lehigh University, Lehigh Univ

  • Justin Jaworski

    Lehigh University