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Acoustic Data Processing and Transient Signal Analysis for the Hybrid Wing Body 14- by 22-Foot Subsonic Wind Tunnel Test
Author(s) -
Christopher J. Bahr,
Thomas F. Brooks,
William M. Humphreys,
Taylor B. Spalt,
Daniel J. Stead
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
28th aiaa/ceas aeroacoustics 2022 conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-2345
Subject(s) - wing , transient (computer programming) , wind tunnel , acoustics , signal (programming language) , foot (prosody) , aeronautics , aerospace engineering , computer science , marine engineering , structural engineering , engineering , physics , programming language , linguistics , philosophy , operating system
An advanced vehicle concept, the HWB N2A-EXTE aircraft design, was tested in NASA Langley's 14- by 22-Foot Subsonic Wind Tunnel to study its acoustic characteristics for var- ious propulsion system installation and airframe con gurations. A signi cant upgrade to existing data processing systems was implemented, with a focus on portability and a re- duction in turnaround time. These requirements were met by updating codes originally written for a cluster environment and transferring them to a local workstation while en- abling GPU computing. Post-test, additional processing of the time series was required to remove transient hydrodynamic gusts from some of the microphone time series. A novel automated procedure was developed to analyze and reject contaminated blocks of data, under the assumption that the desired acoustic signal of interest was a band-limited sta- tionary random process, and of lower variance than the hydrodynamic contamination. The procedure is shown to successfully identify and remove contaminated blocks of data and retain the desired acoustic signal. Additional corrections to the data, mainly background subtraction, shear layer refraction calculations, atmospheric attenuation and microphone directivity corrections, were all necessary for initial analysis and noise assessments. These were implemented for the post-processing of spectral data, and are shown to behave as expected.

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