Acoustic Theory
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Acoustic theory is a scientific field that relates to the description of
sound waves In physics, sound is a vibration that propagates as an acoustic wave, through a transmission medium such as a gas, liquid or solid. In human physiology and psychology, sound is the ''reception'' of such waves and their ''perception'' by the ...
. It derives from
fluid dynamics In physics and engineering, fluid dynamics is a subdiscipline of fluid mechanics that describes the flow of fluids— liquids and gases. It has several subdisciplines, including ''aerodynamics'' (the study of air and other gases in motion) an ...
. See
acoustics Acoustics is a branch of physics that deals with the study of mechanical waves in gases, liquids, and solids including topics such as vibration, sound, ultrasound and infrasound. A scientist who works in the field of acoustics is an acoustician ...
for the
engineering Engineering is the use of scientific method, scientific principles to design and build machines, structures, and other items, including bridges, tunnels, roads, vehicles, and buildings. The discipline of engineering encompasses a broad rang ...
approach. For sound waves of any magnitude of a disturbance in velocity, pressure, and density we have : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot \mathbf + \nabla\cdot(\rho'\mathbf) & = 0 \qquad \text \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \qquad \text \end In the case that the fluctuations in velocity, density, and pressure are small, we can approximate these as : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot \mathbf & = 0 \\ \frac + \frac\nabla p'& = 0 \end Where \mathbf(\mathbf,t) is the perturbed velocity of the fluid, p_0 is the pressure of the fluid at rest, p'(\mathbf,t) is the perturbed pressure of the system as a function of space and time, \rho_0 is the density of the fluid at rest, and \rho'(\mathbf, t) is the variance in the density of the fluid over space and time. In the case that the velocity is
irrotational In vector calculus, a conservative vector field is a vector field that is the gradient of some function. A conservative vector field has the property that its line integral is path independent; the choice of any path between two points does not c ...
(\nabla\times \mathbf = 0), we then have the acoustic wave equation that describes the system: : \frac\frac - \nabla^2\phi = 0 Where we have : \begin \mathbf & = -\nabla \phi \\ c^2 & = (\frac)_s\\ p' & = \rho_0\frac\\ \rho' & = \frac\frac \end


Derivation for a medium at rest

Starting with the Continuity Equation and the Euler Equation: : \begin \frac +\nabla\cdot \rho\mathbf & = 0 \\ \rho\frac + \rho(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p & = 0 \end If we take small perturbations of a constant pressure and density: : \begin \rho & = \rho_0+\rho' \\ p & = p_0 + p' \end Then the equations of the system are : \begin \frac(\rho_0+\rho') +\nabla\cdot (\rho_0+\rho')\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla (p_0+p') & = 0 \end Noting that the equilibrium pressures and densities are constant, this simplifies to : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\nabla\cdot \rho'\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \end


A Moving Medium

Starting with : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\nabla\cdot \rho'\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \end We can have these equations work for a moving medium by setting \mathbf = \mathbf + \mathbf, where \mathbf is the constant velocity that the whole fluid is moving at before being disturbed (equivalent to a moving observer) and \mathbf is the fluid velocity. In this case the equations look very similar: : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\mathbf\cdot\nabla\rho' + \nabla\cdot \rho'\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \end Note that setting \mathbf = 0 returns the equations at rest.


Linearized Waves

Starting with the above given equations of motion for a medium at rest: : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\nabla\cdot \rho'\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \end Let us now take \mathbf,\rho',p' to all be small quantities. In the case that we keep terms to first order, for the continuity equation, we have the \rho'\mathbf term going to 0. This similarly applies for the density perturbation times the time derivative of the velocity. Moreover, the spatial components of the material derivative go to 0. We thus have, upon rearranging the equilibrium density: : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot \mathbf & = 0 \\ \frac + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end Next, given that our sound wave occurs in an ideal fluid, the motion is adiabatic, and then we can relate the small change in the pressure to the small change in the density by : p' = (\frac)_s\rho' Under this condition, we see that we now have : \begin \frac +\rho_0(\frac)_s\nabla\cdot \mathbf & = 0 \\ \frac + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end Defining the speed of sound of the system: : c \equiv \sqrt Everything becomes : \begin \frac +\rho_0c^2\nabla\cdot \mathbf & = 0 \\ \frac + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end


For Irrotational Fluids

In the case that the fluid is irrotational, that is \nabla\times\mathbf = 0, we can then write \mathbf = -\nabla\phi and thus write our equations of motion as : \begin \frac -\rho_0c^2\nabla^2\phi & = 0 \\ -\nabla\frac + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end The second equation tells us that : p' = \rho_0 \frac And the use of this equation in the continuity equation tells us that : \rho_0\frac -\rho_0c^2\nabla^2\phi = 0 This simplifies to : \frac\frac -\nabla^2\phi = 0 Thus the velocity potential \phi obeys the wave equation in the limit of small disturbances. The boundary conditions required to solve for the potential come from the fact that the velocity of the fluid must be 0 normal to the fixed surfaces of the system. Taking the time derivative of this wave equation and multiplying all sides by the unperturbed density, and then using the fact that p' = \rho_0 \frac tells us that : \frac\frac -\nabla^2p' = 0 Similarly, we saw that p' = (\frac)_s\rho' = c^2\rho'. Thus we can multiply the above equation appropriately and see that : \frac\frac -\nabla^2\rho' = 0 Thus, the velocity potential, pressure, and density all obey the wave equation. Moreover, we only need to solve one such equation to determine all other three. In particular, we have : \begin \mathbf & = -\nabla \phi \\ p' & = \rho_0 \frac\\ \rho' & = \frac\frac \end


For a moving medium

Again, we can derive the small-disturbance limit for sound waves in a moving medium. Again, starting with : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\mathbf\cdot\nabla\rho' + \nabla\cdot \rho'\mathbf & = 0 \\ (\rho_0+\rho')\frac + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + (\rho_0+\rho')(\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \nabla p' & = 0 \end We can linearize these into : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\mathbf\cdot\nabla\rho' & = 0 \\ \frac + (\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end


For Irrotational Fluids in a Moving Medium

Given that we saw that : \begin \frac +\rho_0\nabla\cdot\mathbf+\mathbf\cdot\nabla\rho' & = 0 \\ \frac + (\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\mathbf + \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end If we make the previous assumptions of the fluid being ideal and the velocity being irrotational, then we have : \begin p' & = (\frac)_s\rho' = c^2\rho' \\ \mathbf & = -\nabla\phi \end Under these assumptions, our linearized sound equations become : \begin \frac\frac -\rho_0\nabla^2\phi+\frac\mathbf\cdot\nabla p' & = 0 \\ -\frac(\nabla\phi) - (\mathbf\cdot\nabla) nabla\phi+ \frac\nabla p' & = 0 \end Importantly, since \mathbf is a constant, we have (\mathbf\cdot\nabla) nabla\phi= \nabla \mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi/math>, and then the second equation tells us that : \frac \nabla p' = \nabla frac + (\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi Or just that : p' = \rho_0 frac + (\mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi Now, when we use this relation with the fact that \frac\frac -\rho_0\nabla^2\phi+\frac\mathbf\cdot\nabla p' = 0, alongside cancelling and rearranging terms, we arrive at : \frac\frac - \nabla^2\phi + \frac\frac \mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi+ \frac\frac(\mathbf\cdot\nabla\phi) + \frac\mathbf\cdot\nabla \mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi= 0 We can write this in a familiar form as : frac(\frac + \mathbf\cdot\nabla)^2-\nabla^2phi = 0 This differential equation must be solved with the appropriate boundary conditions. Note that setting \mathbf=0 returns us the wave equation. Regardless, upon solving this equation for a moving medium, we then have : \begin \mathbf & = -\nabla \phi \\ p' & = \rho_0(\frac + \mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi\\ \rho' & = \frac(\frac + \mathbf\cdot\nabla)\phi \end


See also

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Acoustic attenuation Acoustic attenuation is a measure of the energy loss of sound propagation in media. Most media have viscosity and are therefore not ideal media. When sound propagates in such media, there is always thermal consumption of energy caused by viscosity. ...
*
Sound In physics, sound is a vibration that propagates as an acoustic wave, through a transmission medium such as a gas, liquid or solid. In human physiology and psychology, sound is the ''reception'' of such waves and their ''perception'' by the ...
*
Fourier analysis In mathematics, Fourier analysis () is the study of the way general functions may be represented or approximated by sums of simpler trigonometric functions. Fourier analysis grew from the study of Fourier series, and is named after Josep ...


References

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Acoustic Theory Fluid dynamics Acoustics Sound