2002
DOI: 10.2514/2.2923
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Flight-Path Management/Control Methodology to Reduce Helicopter Blade-Vortex Interaction Noise

Abstract: A quasi-static acoustic mapping method has been developed to predict rotorcraft external noise. This method takes advantage of an expansion, to rst order, about a solution to the helicopter nondimensional steady-state trim equations to include the effects of acceleration parallel to the ight path and X-force control changes on the radiated noise. Application of the new method to predict helicopter blade-vortex interaction (BVI) noise has shown that choice of ight-path angle, X-force, and vehicle acceleration a… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…Typical examples include modified blade tip shapes, 6 the use of spoilers or vane wings, 7 and flight path management. 8,9 Requiring no external energy input, these methods change the dynamic behavior of the fluid-structure system via modifying its geometrical or physical parameters.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typical examples include modified blade tip shapes, 6 the use of spoilers or vane wings, 7 and flight path management. 8,9 Requiring no external energy input, these methods change the dynamic behavior of the fluid-structure system via modifying its geometrical or physical parameters.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is done in a quasi-static manner by treating acceleration as another flight path control through the Quasi-Static Acoustic Modeling (Q-SAM) method, introduced in Ref. 10. Conceptually, Q-SAM interpolates a measured or predicted set of acoustic data taken in trimmed level steady-state flight to equivalent quasi-static conditions, and then maps the resulting acoustics at these equivalent conditions to positions on the ground.…”
Section: Flight Trajectory Management Using Q-sammentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One-third octave band BVI noise levels on the sphere are then projected to the ground plane observer using the spherical spreading law, corrections for atmospheric absorption and A-weighting (Ref. 10).…”
Section: Flight Trajectory Management Using Q-sammentioning
confidence: 99%
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