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Plenary Lecture

On the Sound Propagation in the Open Air



Professor Veturia Chiroiu

 Member of the Technical Sciences Academy from Romania (ASTR),
Head of Department of Deformable Media,
Romanian Academy,
Institute of Solid Mechanics,
ROMANIA

Email: veturiachiroiu@yahoo.com


Abstract: This contribution is planned to provide the application of the soliton theory to understand the sound propagation in the open air. The sound propagation in the atmosphere is more complicated than the theory of geometrical spreading above a flat hard ground. When sound propagates, it is attenuated with increasing distance between source and receiver, and the sound characteristics depend on time and the distance from the source. Grounds may not be flat and also acoustically soft, the wind and temperature refract sound either upwards or downwards at the ground, leading to complex reflection coefficients and the multiple reflections at the ground. Atmospheric turbulence causes fluctuations and scatters sound into acoustical shadow zones. The methodology to study the sound evolution equation is the soliton theory. The sound is regarded as an entity, a quasi-particle, characterized by a proper propagation mechanism which conserves its character and interacts with the ground properties and micrometeorological factors. The sound propagation theory is faced with the unexpected appearance of chaos or order. Within this framework the soliton plays the role of order. The results obtained in the linear theory of sound motion, by ignoring the nonlinear parts, are most frequently too far from reality to be useful. The linearization misses an important phenomenon, solitons, which are waves, which maintain their identity indefinitely just when we most expect that dispersion effects will lead to their disappearance. The solutions regarding the attenuation due to atmospheric absorption, the decrease in sound pressure level with different factors, are represented by the revolution ruled Tzitzeica surfaces. The capability of the Bäcklund transformation to provide an integrable discretization of the characteristic equations associated to the sound propagation, are considered for modeling the sound rays during downwind and upwind propagation.


Brief Biography of the Speaker:
Veturia Chiroiu (born in 1942) received the PhD degree in Mathematics from University of Bucharest in 1981. Since 1966 she is a senior scientific researcher at the Institute of Solid Mechanics of the Romanian Academy, head of Department of Deformable Media (www.imsar.ro). She received a Fulbright Fellowship to work at the Princeton University, Dept. of Aerospace and Mechanical Science (1972–1973), and has led various research projects (Copernicus, NATO) and lectured in foreign institutes and universities. She is author of numerous research articles in referee journals and international conferences, covering dynamics of deformable media, acoustics, intelligent structures and materials, and inverse problems. She is the winner of the prize Aurel Vlaicu of the Romanian Academy in 1997. Since 2000 she is a PhD advisor in the field of mechanical engineering at the Romanian Academy. Since 2004 she is an Honorific Member of the Technical Sciences Academy of Romania (ASTR).

 

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