The air wave surrounding an expanding sphere
Author(s) -
Geoffrey Ingram Taylor
Publication year - 1946
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london a mathematical and physical sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.814
H-Index - 135
eISSN - 2053-9169
pISSN - 0080-4630
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.1946.0044
Subject(s) - radius , physics , speed of sound , constant (computer programming) , surface (topology) , velocity potential , function (biology) , wave equation , motion (physics) , classical mechanics , mathematical analysis , geometry , mathematics , thermodynamics , quantum mechanics , evolutionary biology , biology , computer science , boundary value problem , programming language , computer security
When the surface of a sphere vibrates in any assigned manner the spherical sound waves which are propagated outwards can be represented by wellknown formulae provided that the motion is such that only small changes in air density occur. When the motion of the spherical surface is radial the velocity potential of the sound wave is Φ = r -1ƒ( r-at ), (1) where a is the velocity of sound and r is the radial co-ordinate. The velocity, u , and the excess, p — p , of pressure over the atmospheric pressure p are u = r -2ƒ( r - at ) — r -1ƒ( r - at ), (2) p-p = - par -1 ƒ‘( r-at ). (3) If R is the radius of the sphere which, by its expansion, is producing waves, R is a function of t and the surface condition is Ṙ = R -2ƒ( R — at ) — R -1ƒu0027( R — at ) (4) Equation (4) is an equation for finding the function ƒ. A simple case in which equation (4) can be solved is when Ṙ is constant so that the sphere is expanding at a uniform velocity. Taking t =0 when R = 0 the radius at time t can be ex1 ressed in the form R = ααt ,
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