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A Recording-Based Method for Auralization of Rotorcraft Flyover Noise
Author(s) -
Nicholas Matthew Pera,
Stephen A. Rizzi,
Siddhartha Krishnamurthy,
C. R. Fuller,
Andrew Christian
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
2018 aiaa aerospace sciences meeting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2018-0267
Subject(s) - noise (video) , acoustics , computer science , noise measurement , computer vision , noise reduction , physics , image (mathematics)
Rotorcraft noise is an active field of study as the sound produced by these vehicles is often found to be annoying. A means to auralize rotorcraft flyover noise is sought to help understand the factors leading to annoyance. Previous work by the authors focused on auralization of rotorcraft fly-in noise, in which a simplification was made that enabled the source noise synthesis to be based on a single emission angle. Here, the goal is to auralize a complete flyover event, so the source noise synthesis must be capable of traversing a range of emission angles. The synthesis uses a source noise definition process that yields periodic and aperiodic (modulation) components at a set of discrete emission angles. In this work, only the periodic components are used for the source noise synthesis for the flyover; the inclusion of modulation components is the subject of ongoing research. Propagation of the synthesized source noise to a ground observer is performed using the NASA Auralization Framework. The method is demonstrated using ground recordings from a flight test of the AS350 helicopter for the source noise definition.

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