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To understand the problem — and how it can be addressed — we need to begin with a look at sound itself. As you’ll (perhaps) remember from physics class in school, sound is a longitudinal, mechanical wave, and it must have a medium (a solid, liquid, or gas) to travel through. It cannot, therefore, travel through a vacuum such as in outer space. As a soundwave moves through a medium, it causes a displacement. This results in a variation in pressure: higher pressure with the crest of the wave, and lower pressure in the trough.
When we hear sound, what we’re actually registering is a change in air pressure. These changes in air pressure cause vibrations in the ear, which are converted into electrical impulses that the brain recognizes as sound. Our hearing is attuned to a certain range of sounds; we can’t hear frequencies that are too low or too high. And at a certain intensity, sound can cause annoyance, what we might call noise.
What’s that noise?
Helicopters generate external noise through several areas. While the engine and transmission certainly generate sound, this is only really heard when the aircraft is up close. “The majority of noise the community is exposed to is aerodynamic in nature, made by the main rotor blades moving through air,” explained Juliet Page, a physical scientist at Volpe, the National Transportation Systems Center. In other words, it is the air itself that is making the noise.
originally posted by: Flyingclaydisk
Thoughts while shaving...
Have you ever asked why a helicopter is so much louder when it approaches you then after it passes you?
Oh sure, I know the official answer is the Doppler Effect, but there must be more to it than this. The Doppler Effect would certainly account for frequency pitch changes, but why overall volume? Most know that helicopters are loud to begin with because their rotor tips are breaking the sound barrier. However, consider the following:
.......
- If the rotor tips of a helicopter are breaking the sound barrier on one side, then the same rotor will break the sound barrier on the other side as it rotates.
....
Yet, the 'whomp-whomp-whomp' of a helicopter can really only be heard when it is approaching. When the helicopter is alongside, or passes directly overhead, the 'whomp' sound almost totally disappears and the only thing you hear after it passes is turbine noise.
Why is this?