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A new instance of crackle noise

ORAL

Abstract

Intense crackle noise has been identified and studied in high temperature, supersonic jets from engines at high specific thrust. A new instance of crackle has been found in LES of cold, plane, perfectly expanded supersonic jets (Mach 1.5, Reynolds number 100,000) impinging of plane wedges. LES is by explicit filtering, with a new adaptive filtering method for shock capturing. Crackle fronts appear when a detached normal shock stands about a half jet width from the wedge tip and the jet column is about 4 jet-widths from the wedge tip. The edges of this oscillating shock interact with the jet's bounding shear layer structures to emit acoustic wave fronts that steepen as they travel into the far field. Pressure signals exhibit sudden rises followed by gentle relaxations, intermittently. Consistently, pressure distributions along lines in the ambient show the existence and arrival of a sequence of sharp compression fronts. Skewness exceeds 0.4 in the far field. Crackle fronts do not appear in other configurations of a short column (steady shock), short column and thin wedge (steady attached oblique shock), long column, thin wedge (large amplitude column oscillations).

Publication: Sumit Kumar Patel, Joseph Mathew, "A new instance of crackle noise" (to be submitted).<br>Sumit Kumar Patel, Joseph Mathew, "Shock Capturing in Large Eddy Simulations by Adaptive Filtering.", Fluids 4, no. 3 (2019): 132<br>Sumit Kumar Patel, Joseph Mathew, "Acoustic fields of a supersonic jet deflected by wedges mounted on a flat plate", 22nd AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, Aeroacoustics Conferences, (AIAA 2016-2942)

Presenters

  • Joseph Mathew

    Indian Institute of Science

Authors

  • Joseph Mathew

    Indian Institute of Science

  • Sumit K Patel

    Indian Institute of Science