4.7 Article

Sound generation mechanism of compressible vortex reconnection

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 933, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.1088

Keywords

hydrodynamic noise; aeroacoustics

Funding

  1. SciNet
  2. Sharcnet
  3. TTU President's Distinguished Chair Funds
  4. Compute Canada

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The study investigates the sound generation mechanism of initially subsonic viscous vortex reconnection at vortex Reynolds number Re = 1500. The Laplacian of kinetic energy, flexion product, enstrophy and deviation from isentropic condition contribute significantly to the acoustic source. The coiling and uncoiling of twisted vortex filaments wrapping around bridges generate significant sound due to rapid strain induced by bridge repulsion. Mutual cancellations among the acoustic source terms and symmetry breaking play important roles in sound generation. Compressibility delays the onset of reconnection events, impacting sound generation.
We study the sound generation mechanism of initially subsonic viscous vortex reconnection at vortex Reynolds number Re (equivalent to circulation/kinematic viscosity) = 1500 through decomposition of Lighthill's acoustic source term. The Laplacian of the kinetic energy, flexion product, enstrophy and deviation from the isentropic condition provide the dominant contributions to the acoustic source term. The overall (all time) extrema of the total source term and its dominant hydrodynamic components scale linearly with the reference Mach number M-o; the deviation from the isentropic condition shows a quadratic scaling. The significant sound arising from the flexion product occurs due to the coiling and uncoiling of the twisted vortex filaments wrapping around the bridges, when a rapid strain is induced on the filaments by the repulsion of the bridges. The spatial distributions of the various acoustic source terms reveal the importance of mutual cancellations among most of the terms; this also highlights the importance of symmetry breaking in the sound generation during reconnection. Compressibility acts to delay the start of the sequence of reconnection events, as long as shocklets, if formed, are sufficiently weak to not affect the reconnection. The delayed onset has direct ramifications for the sound generation by enhancing the velocity of the entrained jet between the vortices and increasing the spatial gradients of the acoustic source terms. Consistent with the near-field pressure, the overall maximum instantaneous sound pressure level in the far field has a quadratic dependence on M-o. Thus, reconnection becomes an even more dominant sound-generating event at higher M-o.

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