Twisting waves increase the visibility of nonlinear behaviour
Author(s) -
Grace Richard,
Holly S. Lay,
Daniel Giovannini,
S. Cochran,
Gabriel C. Spalding,
Martin P. J. Lavery
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
new journal of physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.584
H-Index - 190
ISSN - 1367-2630
DOI - 10.1088/1367-2630/ab8aab
Subject(s) - physics , acoustics , nonlinear system , sound pressure , acoustic wave , aperture (computer memory) , optics , wavefront , phase (matter) , quantum mechanics
Nonlinear behaviour for acoustic systems is readily measured at high acoustic pressures in gasses or bulk materials. However, at low acoustic pressures nonlinear effects are not commonly observed. We find that by phase structuring acoustic beams, one observes evidence of nonlinear behaviour at an acoustic pressure of 66.78 dB lower than non-structured beams in room temperature air. A bespoke 28-element ultrasonic phased array antenna was developed to generate short pulses that carry orbital angular momentum and are propagated over a short air channel. When sampling small areas of the wavefront, we observed a distinctive change in the frequency components near phase singularities. At these phase singularities the local propagation path is screwed, resulting in the collection signals from pulses travelling along different paths across the aperture of a microphone. The usually negligible frequency chirping that arises from nonlinear behaviour in air interfere at these singularity points and produce a distinctive distortion of the acoustic pulse. Simple physical movement in the system or super-sonic wave speeds do not yield similar results. Such distortions in measured frequency response near phase singularities could lead to errors for SONAR or acoustic communication systems, where received signals are integrated over a finite-area detector. With further development this behaviour could potentially lead to accurate measurement techniques for determining a material’s nonlinear properties at lower acoustic pressure.
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