Abstract

An experiment has been conducted in NASA Langley’s free-jet anechoic facility to assess the effect of a free-jet shear layer on sound radiation from an acoustic source placed inside the jet: The nozzle diameter was 1.22 m and operated at an exit velocity of 35 m/s. Two different types of sources were used; one was a compact source with a nearly uniform radiation pattern, the other was a noncompact source with highly directional radiation pattern. The acoustic source was driven by by pure tone and 1/3-octave band white noise. Acoustic measurements were made both inside the jet flow in the potential core region and outside the jet in the acoustic farfield. The effects of mean flow convection and mean shear refraction on sound radiation were determined. The experimental results compared favorably with analytical predictions. The effect of free-jet turbulence on sound scattering was found to be insignificant.

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