Abstract

Spatially dense operative deflection shapes and receptances, acquired in broad frequency bands, increase the detail in the spatial and frequency domains of the responses of parts in actual dynamic loading, manufacturing and mounting conditions. This work remarks the potential benefits of greater spatial resolution in the Rayleigh integral approximation of sound pressure—here reformulated to exploit the increased quality output from experiment-based optical full-field technologies in contactless structural dynamics—radiated by a vibrating surface in a broad frequency band. But in some cases the noise that is scattered over the estimated receptance maps might be heavier, or with different patterns, than expected, with potential repercussions on the sound pressure simulations that come thereof. This work covers this specific latter issue with insight over examples from experiment-based receptances of a lightweight vibrating plate. The effects of error spreading are analysed in the space and frequency domains, with special attention to the contribution of the experiment-based full-field receptance maps to the accuracy of the vibro-acoustic frequency response function maps.

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