MAE Seminar: Reduction of Jet Noise for Future Supersonic Commercial Aircraft
Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
University of California, Irvine
Abstract: Compliance with airport noise regulations remains a major hurdle for the development of future civil supersonic aircraft. These aircraft would be powered by advanced turbofan engines whose high-speed jet exhaust on takeoff creates sound levels far above those of the current subsonic fleet. Research at UC Irvine has shown the potential for noise reduction by asymmetric shaping of the exhaust plume. The seminar will review recent experimental efforts as well as the development of methodologies for low-cost, physics-based prediction of the noise reduction.
Bio: Dimitri Papamoschou is a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at UC Irvine. He received his doctorate in aeronautics at Caltech. His research interests include compressible turbulence, jet and fan aeroacoustics, and advanced noise source imaging methods. In jet aeroacoustics, he has shown the potential for noise reduction by asymmetric distortion of the jet velocity field, a concept that has led to several patents. He is a fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and recipient of the 2017 AIAA Aeroacoustics Award.
Share
Upcoming Events
-
MAE 298 SEMINAR: Co-Designing Mutual Aid Transportation for Disaster Resilience
-
CBE 298 Seminar: Engineering Strategies for Structural Heart Disease
-
MSE 298 Seminar: Radiation Resistance and Mechanical Response of Ceramics in Extreme Environments
-
MAE 298 SEMINAR: Stretchable Electronics for Soft Biological and Robotic Systems
-
CBE Distinguished Lecture/CBE 298 Seminar: Computational Design of Peptides as Detectors, Sensors and Drugs