
Influence of the internal dynamics of the interacting coherent vortex structures to the generated sound field
Author(s) -
T. P. Konovalyuk,
AUTHOR_ID,
T. S. Krasnopol’skaya,
Evgeniy D. Pechuk,
AUTHOR_ID,
AUTHOR_ID
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
vìsnik. serìâ fìziko-matematičnì nauki/vìsnik kiì̈vsʹkogo nacìonalʹnogo unìversitetu ìmenì tarasa ševčenka. serìâ fìziko-matematičnì nauki
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2218-2055
pISSN - 1812-5409
DOI - 10.17721/1812-5409.2021/3.7
Subject(s) - vortex , vorticity , physics , field (mathematics) , classical mechanics , mechanics , mathematics , pure mathematics
The article is dedicated to the glowing memory of the talented Ukrainian scientist-mechanic, professor, doctor of physical and mathematical sciences Vyacheslav Vladimirovich Meleshko. The sound fields of several coherent vortex structures interacting with each other were calculated using the moment model (MZS-model) of the first and second orders. In the first-order MZS-model, vortices are described by point vortices, in the second-order MZS-model--by Kirchhoff vortices. Sound fields as a result of vortex interaction are calculated using the Lighthill's acoustic analogy under Powell's formulation. The spectrum of the sound field in the description of coherent vortices by point vortices is characterized by a single frequency band, which reflects the motion of the vortex centers of vortices (large-scale vortex movements). Taking into account the inner vortex dynamics leads to the expansion of spectrum and level increasing of calculated sound: the lower band describes the motion of the vorticity centers of spots, the higher band describes the internal dynamics of the vorticity. It is shown that large-scale vortex movements can be modeled by point vortices, when the sound spectrum of distributed vortices is clearly divided into bands and the width of the lower frequency band is close to the width of the sound spectrum from point vortices. The presence of an upper frequency band in the sound field of interacting vortex spots does not allow us to describe the distributed vortices as point vortices when constructing a sound source, since such a simplification leads to a significant underestimation of the level of the calculated sound field.