On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations

Air traffic is growing at a steady rate of 3% to 5% per year in most regions of the world, implying a doubling every 15–25 years. This requires major advances in aircraft noise reduction at airports, just not to increase the noise exposure due to the larger number of aircraft movements. In fact it c...

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Main Author: Luís M. B. C. Campos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-02-01
Series:Aerospace
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/2/1/17
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spelling doaj-ac576cc5c58b40c092517ae2d9d4ebc32020-11-25T00:54:19ZengMDPI AGAerospace2226-43102015-02-0121179010.3390/aerospace2010017aerospace2010017On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport OperationsLuís M. B. C. Campos0CCTAE (Center for Aeronautical and Space Science and Technology), Instituto de Engenharia Mecânica (IDMEC), IST (Instituto Superior Técnico), Universidade de Lisboa, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1049-001 Lisboa, PortugalAir traffic is growing at a steady rate of 3% to 5% per year in most regions of the world, implying a doubling every 15–25 years. This requires major advances in aircraft noise reduction at airports, just not to increase the noise exposure due to the larger number of aircraft movements. In fact it can be expected, as a consequence of increased opposition to noise by near airport residents, that the overall noise exposure will have to be reduced, by bans, curfews, fines, and other means and limitations, unless significantly quieter aircraft operations are achieved. The ultimate solution is aircraft operations inaudible outside the airport perimeter, or noise levels below road traffic and other existing local noise sources. These substantial noise reductions cannot come at the expense of a degradation of cruise efficiency, that would affect not just economics and travel time, but would increase fuel consumption and emission of pollutants on a global scale. The paper reviews the: (i) current knowledge of the aircraft noise sources; (ii) the sound propagation in the atmosphere and ground effects that determine the noise annoyance of near-airport residents; (iii) the noise mitigation measures that can be applied to current and future aircraft; (iv) the prospects of evolutionary and novel aircraft designs towards quieter aircraft in the near term and eventually to operations inaudible outside the airport perimeter. The 20 figures and 1 diagram with their legends provide a visual summary of the review.http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/2/1/17aeroacousticsaircraft noiseairport noise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luís M. B. C. Campos
spellingShingle Luís M. B. C. Campos
On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
Aerospace
aeroacoustics
aircraft noise
airport noise
author_facet Luís M. B. C. Campos
author_sort Luís M. B. C. Campos
title On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
title_short On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
title_full On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
title_fullStr On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
title_full_unstemmed On Physical Aeroacoustics with Some Implications for Low-Noise Aircraft Design and Airport Operations
title_sort on physical aeroacoustics with some implications for low-noise aircraft design and airport operations
publisher MDPI AG
series Aerospace
issn 2226-4310
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Air traffic is growing at a steady rate of 3% to 5% per year in most regions of the world, implying a doubling every 15–25 years. This requires major advances in aircraft noise reduction at airports, just not to increase the noise exposure due to the larger number of aircraft movements. In fact it can be expected, as a consequence of increased opposition to noise by near airport residents, that the overall noise exposure will have to be reduced, by bans, curfews, fines, and other means and limitations, unless significantly quieter aircraft operations are achieved. The ultimate solution is aircraft operations inaudible outside the airport perimeter, or noise levels below road traffic and other existing local noise sources. These substantial noise reductions cannot come at the expense of a degradation of cruise efficiency, that would affect not just economics and travel time, but would increase fuel consumption and emission of pollutants on a global scale. The paper reviews the: (i) current knowledge of the aircraft noise sources; (ii) the sound propagation in the atmosphere and ground effects that determine the noise annoyance of near-airport residents; (iii) the noise mitigation measures that can be applied to current and future aircraft; (iv) the prospects of evolutionary and novel aircraft designs towards quieter aircraft in the near term and eventually to operations inaudible outside the airport perimeter. The 20 figures and 1 diagram with their legends provide a visual summary of the review.
topic aeroacoustics
aircraft noise
airport noise
url http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/2/1/17
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