Edge Effects in Reverberation Room Sound Absorption Measurements

Friday, March 22, 1991 4:00 p.m. David Nelson Acoustic Systems Acoustical Research Facility Austin, Texas The “edge effect” is a natural consequence of sound absorption measurements in reverberation chambers, which comes about because the reverberant sound field is diffused everywhere except directly over the specimen. The effect causes inflated sound absorption coefficient readings which are…

Seismo Acoustics at the Saclant Undersea Research Laboratory, La Spezia, Italy

Friday, February 22, 1991 4:00 p.m. Dr. Tom Muir Applied Research Laboratory The University of Texas at Austin Assigned to SACLANTCEN, 1986-89 In order to support ocean acoustic modeling and sonar performance prediction, it is necessary to acquire geoacoustic data on the sediment structures. The direct mea­surement of shear wave velocity and attenuation within the…

Experimental Results with a High Efficiency Siren for High Intensity Acoustic Applications

Friday, February 15, 1991 4:00 p.m. Bart Lipkens Graduate Student Mechanical Engineering Department The University of Texas at Austin The application of high intensity acoustics to several energy-related processes has recently experienced much renewed interest. Acoustic levels of 150 to 160 dB appear to be required at frequencies in the 1000-3000 Hz range. In a…

Experimental Detection of a Slow Acoustic Wave in Sediment at Shallow Grazing Angles

Wednesday, January 30, 1991 4:00 p.m. Frank A. Boyle and Nicholas P. Chotiros Applied Research Laboratories The University of Texas at Austin Following recent experimental results at sea that suggest the existence of a pre­viously undetected type of acoustic wave in sandy sediments, an experiment was designed to detect and measure the speed of acoustic…

A Time Domain Computer Algorithm for Pulsed Nonlinear Sound Beams

Thursday, November 15, 1990 4:00 p.m. Yang-Sub Lee Department of Mechanical Engineering The University of Texas at Austin A time domain computer algorithm for solving the KZK (Kokhlov-Zabolotskaya-Kuznetsov) nonlinear parabolic wave equation has been developed for pulsed, axisymmetric, finite amplitude sound beams. The KZK equation accounts consistently for the combined effects of the thermoviscous dissipation,…

Auditory Enhancement and Suppression in Normal-Hearing Persons with Reduced Speech Recognition in Noise

Monday, November 5, 1990 4:00 p.m. Dr. Linda M. Thibodeau Department of Speech Communication The University of Texas at Austin Auditory enhancement and suppression have been suggested as possible mechanisms underlying one’s ability to understand speech. Using a forward-masking paradigm, enhancement and suppression effects were evaluated in two groups of normal-hearing persons who differed in…

A Variational Model for Bubbly Liquids: Reflection of a Plane Wave from a Bubbly Liquid Half-Space

Monday, September 24, 1990 4:00 p.m. J. A . Hawkins, Jr. and Dr. A. Bedford Applied Research Laboratories The The University of Texas at Austin Using a variational technique, we have investigated the acoustic properties of bubbly liquids with a distribution of bubble sizes [J. A. Hawkins, Jr. and A. Bedford, J. Acoust. Soc. Am.…

NOVA: Chaos

Monday, September 17, 1990 4:00 p.m. The new science of chaos is covered in a general manner. Strange attractors, sensi­tivity on initial conditions, and other chaos ideas are discussed. Many of the original researchers explain their work, including Michael Barnsley, Jerry Gollub, and UT’s Harry Swinney. Applications of chaos theory to weather and biological systems…