2014
DOI: 10.1121/1.4895701
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Discriminating between the nearfield and the farfield of acoustic transducers

Abstract: Measurements of the performance of acoustic transducers, as well as ordinary measurements made with the same, may require discriminating between the farfield, where the field is spherically divergent, and the complementary nearfield, where the field structure is more complicated. The problem is addressed for a planar circular piston projector, with uniform normal velocity distribution, mounted in an infinite planar rigid baffle. The inward-extrapolated farfield pressure amplitude p f is compared with the exact… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…In the near field, the acoustic pressure is not well described by the product of a range term and an angular term as it is in the far field (Foote, 2014;Urick, 1983). As a result, in the near field there is no clearly defined beamwidth, and the intensity of the sound does not obey 1/r spreading seen in the far field.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In the near field, the acoustic pressure is not well described by the product of a range term and an angular term as it is in the far field (Foote, 2014;Urick, 1983). As a result, in the near field there is no clearly defined beamwidth, and the intensity of the sound does not obey 1/r spreading seen in the far field.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…(A5)]. For a transducer of finite size, the radiation field can be calculated by integrating the active element surface (Zemanek, 1971;Nyborg and Steele, 1985;Van Buren, 1989;Foote 2014). In this application, the scattering involves both transmitter and receiver, the single 2-D integral over the transmitter for radiation filed only given by Zemanek (1971), Nyborg and Steele (1985), Van Buren (1989), and Foote (2014) is extended to two double integrals: One is over the transmitter surface (A T ) and the other is over the receiver surface (A R ).…”
Section: A Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The acceleration time series were then integrated using the fractional step digital filter provided as equation (16) and illustrated in figure 48 to yield the three-dimensional acoustic particle velocity. The acoustic pressure at the center of the array was estimated as the average of the pressures observed at the vertices of the tetrahedron as indicated in equation (15). figure 50a.…”
Section: Figure 47 Pressure Gradient Estimation Bandpass Filter Respmentioning
confidence: 99%