Abstract
In this paper the energy streamlines, energy paths, and energy streak lines in a steady
or unsteady inhomogeneous acoustic field next to an unstable oscillating boundary,
such as a vortex sheet or shear layer, are determined. The theory in the paper applies
also to an evanescent wave produced by total internal reflection, and to any other
type of edge wave, e.g. a coastally or topographically trapped wave in geophysical
fluid dynamics. The idea of the paper is that energy velocity, i.e. energy flux divided by
energy density, is defined at every point in space and time, not merely when averaged
over a cycle. Integration of the ordinary differential equation for energy velocity as
a function of position and time gives the energy paths. These paths are calculated
explicitly, and are found to have starting and finishing directions very different
from those of cycle-averaged paths. The paper discusses the physical significance of
averaged and non-averaged energy paths, especially in relation to causality. Many
energy paths have cusps, at which the energy velocity is instantaneously zero. The
domain of influence of an arbitrary point on the boundary of a steady acoustic edge
wave is shown to lie within 45° of a certain direction, in agreement with a known result
on shear-layer instability in compressible flow. The results are consistent with flow
visualization photographs of near-field jet noise. The method of the paper determines
domains of influence and causality in any wave problem with an explicit solution, for
example as represented by a Fourier integral.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
9 articles.
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