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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: The polyphase history of gold mineralization seen in the Pietersburg greenstone belt is integrated with the geochemical and tectonic evolution of greenstone belts as a whole. The four distinct regional geological settings of gold mineralization are described.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Lunar and Planetary Inst. Workshop on the Tectonic Evolution of Greenstone Belts; p 35-36
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: The proposed ducted fan engine has prompted the need for increasingly lightweight and efficient noise control devices. Exploratory tests at the NASA Langley Research Center were conducted to evaluate three piezoelectric specimens as possible control transducers: a Polyvinylidene Flouride (PVDF) piezofilm sample and two composite samples of Lead Zirconate Titanate (PZT) rods embedded in fiberglass. The tests measured the acoustic output efficiency and evaluated the noise control characteristics when interacting with a primary sound source. The results showed that a PZT sample could diminish the reflected acoustic waves. However, the PZT acoustic output must increase by several orders of magnitude to qualify as a control transducer for the ducted fan engine.
    Keywords: Acoustics
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The responses of a hot film sensor and a pressure probe to acoustic excitation in steady flow up to a Mach number of 0.5 were measured and compared with the responses of a microphone, flush mounted in the wall of the flow duct. When compared in terms of fluctuating pressure, the response of the pressure probe was less than that of the wall microphone by about 2.1 dB or less at the 0.5 Mach number, while the response of the ho film probe was as much as 6.0 dB above that of the wall sensor, at the Mach numbers 0.3 and 0.5. In terms of fluctuating Reynolds number, the response of the hot film probe was greater than that of the wall-mounted sensor by at most 5.0 dB at the same Mach numbers. Removing the response contribution from fluctuating temperature in the hot film mathematical model improved the agreement between the two transducer responses for both comparisons.
    Keywords: FLUID MECHANICS AND HEAT TRANSFER
    Type: AIAA PAPER 86-1889
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: An experiment was conducted to compare the relative responses of a hot-film probe and a pressure probe positioned in a flow duct carrying mean flow and progressive acoustic waves. The response of each probe was compared with that of a condenser-type microphone flush mounted in the duct wall for flow Mach numbers up to about 0.5. The response of the pressure probe was less than that of the flush-mounted microphone by not more than about 2.1 dB at the highest centerline Mach number. This decreased response of the probe can likely be attributed to flow-induced impedance changes at the probe sensor orifices. The response of the hot-film probe, expressed in terms of fluctuating pressure, was greater than that of the flush-mounted microphone by as much as 6.0 dB at the two higher centerline Mach numbers. Removal of the contribution from fluctuating temperature in the hot-film analytical model greatly improved the agreement between the two transducer responses.
    Keywords: ACOUSTICS
    Type: NASA-TP-2581 , L-16079 , NAS 1.60:2581
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A laser technique to remove material in excess of 10 mg/sec from a spinning rotor is described. This material removal rate is 20 times greater than previously reported for a surface speed of 30 m/sec. Material removal enhancement was achieved by steering a focused laser beam with moving optics to increase the time of laser energy interaction with a particular location on the circumferential surface of a spinning rotor. A neodymium:yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) pulse laser was used in this work to evaluate material removal for carbon steel, 347 stainless steel, Inconal 718, and titanium 6-4. This technique is applicable to dynamic laser balancing.
    Keywords: LASERS AND MASERS
    Type: NASA-CR-174731 , NAS 1.26:174731 , REPT-84-SRD-042
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: This paper explores the effects of variable-depth geometry on the amount of noise reduction that can be achieved with acoustic liners. Results for two variable-depth liners tested in the NASA Langley Grazing Flow Impedance Tube demonstrate significant broadband noise reduction. An impedance prediction model is combined with two propagation codes to predict corresponding sound pressure level profiles over the length of the Grazing Flow Impedance Tube. The comparison of measured and predicted sound pressure level profiles is sufficiently favorable to support use of these tools for investigation of a number of proposed variable-depth liner configurations. Predicted sound pressure level profiles for these proposed configurations reveal a number of interesting features. Liner orientation clearly affects the sound pressure level profile over the length of the liner, but the effect on the total attenuation is less pronounced. The axial extent of attenuation at an individual frequency continues well beyond the location where the liner depth is optimally tuned to the quarter-wavelength of that frequency. The sound pressure level profile is significantly affected by the way in which variable-depth segments are distributed over the length of the liner. Given the broadband noise reduction capability for these liner configurations, further development of impedance prediction models and propagation codes specifically tuned for this application is warranted.
    Keywords: Acoustics
    Type: NF1676L-20142 , AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference; Jun 22, 2015 - Jun 26, 2015; Dallas, TX; United States
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A two-dimensional impedance eduction theory is extended to three-dimensional sound fields and peripherally varying duct liners. The approach is to first measure the acoustic pressure field at a series of flush-mounted wall microphones located around the periphery of the flow duct. The numerical solution for the acoustic pressure field at these microphones is also obtained by solving the three-dimensional convected Helmholtz equation using the finite element method. A quadratic objective function based on the difference between the measured and finite element solution is constructed and the unknown impedance function is obtained by minimizing this objective function. Impedance spectra educed for two uniform-structure liners (a wire-mesh and a conventional liner) and a hard-soft-hard peripherally varying liner (for which the soft segment is that of the conventional liner) are presented. Results are presented at three mean flow Mach numbers and fourteen sound source frequencies. The impedance spectra of the uniform-structure liners are also computed using a two-dimensional impedance eduction theory. The primary conclusions of the study are: 1) when measured data is used with the uniform-structure liners, the three-dimensional theory reproduces the same impedance spectra as the two-dimensional theory except for frequencies corresponding to very low or very high liner attenuation; and 2) good agreement between the educed impedance spectra of the uniform structure conventional liner and the soft segment of the peripherally varying liner is obtained.
    Keywords: Acoustics
    Type: NF1676L-19964 , AIAA Aviation 2015; Jun 22, 2015 - Jun 26, 2015; Dallas, TX; United States
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Two impedance eduction methods are explored for use with data acquired in the NASA Langley Grazing Flow Impedance Tube. The first is an indirect method based on the convected Helmholtz equation, and the second is a direct method based on the Kumaresan and Tufts algorithm. Synthesized no-flow data, with random jitter to represent measurement error, are used to evaluate a number of possible microphone locations. Statistical approaches are used to evaluate the suitability of each set of microphone locations. Given the computational resources required, small sample statistics are employed for the indirect method. Since the direct method is much less computationally intensive, a Monte Carlo approach is employed to gather its statistics. A comparison of results achieved with full and reduced sets of microphone locations is used to determine which sets of microphone locations are acceptable. For the indirect method, each array that includes microphones in all three regions (upstream and downstream hard wall sections, and liner test section) provides acceptable results, even when as few as eight microphones are employed. The best arrays employ microphones well away from the leading and trailing edges of the liner. The direct method is constrained to use microphones opposite the liner. Although a number of arrays are acceptable, the optimum set employs 14 microphones positioned well away from the leading and trailing edges of the liner. The selected sets of microphone locations are also evaluated with data measured for ceramic tubular and perforate-over-honeycomb liners at three flow conditions (Mach 0.0, 0.3, and 0.5). They compare favorably with results attained using all 53 microphone locations. Although different optimum microphone locations are selected for the two impedance eduction methods, there is significant overlap. Thus, the union of these two microphone arrays is preferred, as it supports usage of both methods. This array contains 3 microphones in the upstream hard wall section, 14 microphones opposite the liner, and 3 microphones in the downstream hard wall section.
    Keywords: Acoustics
    Type: NF1676L-20029 , AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference; Jun 22, 2015 - Jun 26, 2015; Dallas, TX; United States
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The accuracy of the Ingard-Myers boundary condition and a recently proposed modified Ingard-Myers boundary condition is evaluated for use in impedance eduction under the assumption of uniform mean flow. The evaluation is performed at three centerline Mach numbers, using data acquired in a grazing flow impedance tube, using both upstream and downstream propagating sound sources, and on a database of test liners for which the expected behavior of the impedance spectra is known. The test liners are a hard-wall insert consisting of 12.6 mm thick aluminum, a linear liner without a facesheet consisting of a number of small diameter but long cylindrical channels embedded in a ceramic material, and two conventional nonlinear liners consisting of a perforated facesheet bonded to a honeycomb core. The study is restricted to a frequency range for which only plane waves are cut on in the hard-wall sections of the flow impedance tube. The metrics used to evaluate each boundary condition are 1) how well it educes the same impedance for upstream and downstream propagating sources, and 2) how well it predicts the expected behavior of the impedance spectra over the Mach number range. The primary conclusions of the study are that the same impedance is educed for upstream and downstream propagating sources except at the highest Mach number, that an effective impedance based on both the upstream and downstream measurements is more accurate than an impedance based on the upstream or downstream data alone, and that the Ingard-Myers boundary condition with an effective impedance produces results similar to that achieved with the modified Ingard-Myers boundary condition.
    Keywords: Aeronautics (General)
    Type: NF1676L-13782 , 18th AIAA/CEAS Aeronautics Conference; Jun 04, 2012 - Jun 06, 2012; Colorado Springs, CO; United States
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: This paper explores the validity of an indirect method for impedance eduction of multisegment liners. This is accomplished via results obtained with two uniform liners and one two-segment liner, where each segment is constructed to match the geometry of one of the uniform liners. Each uniform liner is evaluated using direct and indirect impedance eduction methods. An indirect impedance eduction method is used to educe the impedance for each segment of the two-segment liner, and the results are compared with those educed for the uniform liners. These impedance spectra are shown to compare favorably for the majority of test conditions. Poorer comparisons are achieved for those test conditions where one segment of the two-segment liner provides little attenuation. Poor attenuation is a wellknown cause for impedance eduction difficulties. Overall, this multisegment impedance eduction method offers the potential to study complicated liners in a more efficient manner (i.e., without the requirement to build and test separate liners to duplicate each unique segment of the multisegment liner). More detailed studies are required to further validate this tool, and are intended to be the focus of future research.
    Keywords: Acoustics
    Type: NF1676L-28585 , AIAA Aviation Forum; Jun 25, 2018 - Jun 29, 2018; Atlanta, GA; United States
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