Impulse propagation over a complex site: A comparison of experimental results and numerical predictions

  • Dragna D
  • Blanc-Benon P
  • Poisson F
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Abstract

Results from outdoor acoustic measurements performed in a railway site near Reims in France in May 2010 are compared to those obtained from a finite-difference time-domain solver of the linearized Euler equations. During the experiments, the ground profile and the different ground surface impedances were determined. Meteorological measurements were also performed to deduce mean vertical profiles of wind and temperature. An alarm pistol was used as a source of impulse signals and three microphones were located along a propagation path. The various measured parameters are introduced as input data into the numerical solver. In the frequency domain, the numerical results are in good accordance with the measurements up to a frequency of 2 kHz. In the time domain, except a time shift, the predicted waveforms match the measured waveforms with a close agreement.

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Dragna, D., Blanc-Benon, P., & Poisson, F. (2014). Impulse propagation over a complex site: A comparison of experimental results and numerical predictions. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 135(3), 1096–1105. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4864286

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