Discussion Closed This discussion was created more than 6 months ago and has been closed. To start a new discussion with a link back to this one, click here.
linear elastic fluid model with attenuation
Posted 2016年1月21日 GMT-5 05:16 Acoustics & Vibrations Version 5.0 1 Reply
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Hi everyone,
I'm developing a model to predict the sound pressure around a point source. All the domains are composed by water and I need a fluid model with attenuation. So i set up the attenuation coefficient expressed as Np/m as function of frequency (I'm dealing with frequency domain). The trouble is that the sound pressure calculated through the model with attenuation results bigger then the sound pressure calculated with a linear elastic model without attenuation. the only way a found to solve the problem was to put a minus sign forward the attenuation coefficient, but i think this solution has no physic explaination. Can someone help me to understand the problem?
I'm developing a model to predict the sound pressure around a point source. All the domains are composed by water and I need a fluid model with attenuation. So i set up the attenuation coefficient expressed as Np/m as function of frequency (I'm dealing with frequency domain). The trouble is that the sound pressure calculated through the model with attenuation results bigger then the sound pressure calculated with a linear elastic model without attenuation. the only way a found to solve the problem was to put a minus sign forward the attenuation coefficient, but i think this solution has no physic explaination. Can someone help me to understand the problem?
1 Reply Last Post 2016年1月25日 GMT-5 13:01