Abstract

The farfield noise generated by supersonic jets is investigated by a computational aeroacoustics methodology that couples 3-D large-eddy simulation (LES) near field data with the Ffowcs Williams- Hawkings method for farfield noise prediction. In order to accurately simulate jets at off-design supersonic conditions, we employ LES with characteristic filters for shock-capturing. This approach limits the dissipation of noise-producing turbulent fluctuations, and is suitable for incorporation into existing solvers. To further limit dissipation, a shock detector is used to determine shock locations and characteristic filters are applied locally. In this study, both perfectly-expanded and under-expanded unheated jets are investigated, with and without using characteristic filters. Comparisons with similar numerical and experimental data show reasonable agreement of the jet mean flow, turbulent statistics, and acoustics results. Preliminary grid-refinement shows improvement in these results.

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