Page 21 - Volume 9, Issue 3
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                                2009 ASME Turbo Expo, 217-229 (2009).
49 C. K. W. Tam, K. Viswanathan, N. N. Pastouchenko and B. Tam,
“Continuation of the near acoustic field of a jet to the far field. Part II: Experimental validation and noise source characteris- tics,” AIAA Paper 2010-3729 (2010).
50 J. Morgan, T. B. Neilsen, K. L. Gee, A. T. Wall, and M. M. James, “Simple-source model of high-power jet aircraft noise,” Noise Control Eng. J. 60, 435-449 (2012).
51 P. N. Shah, H. Vold and M. Yang, "Reconstruction of far-field noise using multireference acoustical holography measurements of high-speed jets," AIAA Paper 2011-2772 (2011).
52 D. M. Hart, T. B. Neilsen, K. L. Gee, and M. M. James, “A Bayesian based equivalent sound source model for a military jet aircraft,” Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 19, 055094 (2013).
53 J. Hald, "Basic theory and properties of statistically optimized near-field acoustical holography," J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 125, 2105- 2120 (2009).
54 M. Lee and J. S. Bolton, "Reconstruction of source distributions from sound pressures measured over discontinuous regions: Multipatch holography and interpolation," J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 121, 2086-2096 (2007).
55 A. T. Wall, K. L. Gee, T. B. Neilsen, D. W. Krueger, M. M. James, S. D. Sommerfeldt, and J. D. Blotter, “Full-scale jet noise charac- terization using scan-based acoustical holography,” AIAA paper 2012-2081 (2012).
56 A. T. Wall, K. L. Gee, T. B. Neilsen, and M. M. James, “Acoustical holography imaging of full-scale jet noise fields,” Proc. Noise-
Con (2013).
57 G. A. Brès, J. W. Nichols, S. K. Lele, and F. E. Ham, “Towards best
practices for jet noise predictions with unstructured large eddy
simulations,” AIAA paper 2012-2965 (2012).
58 J. W. Nichols, F. E. Ham, S. K. Lele, and J. Bridges, “Aeroacoustics
of a supersonic rectangular jet: Experiments and LES predic-
tions,” AIAA paper 2012-678 (2012).
59 G. A. Brès, J. W. Nichols, S. K. Lele, F. E. Ham, R. H. Schlinker,
R. A. Reba, and J. Simonich, “Unstructured large eddy simula- tion of a hot supersonic over-expanded jet with chevrons,” AIAA paper 2012-2213 (2012).
60 J. W. Nichols, S. K. Lele, and J. T. Spyropoulos, “The source of crackle noise in heated supersonic jets,” AIAA paper 2013-2197 (2013).
61 A. Sinha, R.H. Schlinker, J.S. Simonich, R.A. Reba and T. Colonius, “Toward active control of noise from hot supersonic jets,” AIAA paper 2013-2234 (2013).
62 N. E. Murray, B. J. Jansen, H. Naiman, J. Erwinz, N. Sinhaj, “Progress on Optimized Jet Noise Reduction,” submitted to AIAA Sci Tech 2014.
63 P. J. Morris, D. K. McLaughlin, and C.-W. Kuo, “Noise reduction in supersonic jets by nozzle fluidic inserts,” J. Sound Vib. 332, 3992-4003 (2013).
64 R. W. Powers, C.-W. Kuo, and D. K. McLaughlin, “Experimental comparison of supersonic jets exhausting from military style nozzles with interior corrugations and fluidic inserts,” AIAA Paper 2013-2186 (2013).
   Dr. Micah Downing is a founding member of Blue Ridge Research and Consulting, LLC and serves as President and Chief Scientist. His research has focused on aircraft noise and sonic booms and their effects on people and the environ- ment, with previous positions at the Air Force Research Laboratory and Wyle Laboratories, Inc. Through his career, he has directed more than 40 field measurement projects for the USAF, USN, USA, NATO, and NPS. He has also led the acoustical analysis for over 10 major environmental impact studies for the DoD. He received his BS in Physics from Davidson College, his MS in Aeronautics from the Joint Institute for the Advancement of Flight Sciences at NASA Langley, and his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Outside of work, his main pursuit is perfecting Carolina pulled pork on his deck in the mountains of western North Carolina.
 Kent L. Gee received his PhD in Acoustics from Penn State in 2005 and then joined the physics faculty at Brigham Young University. From active control of fan noise to solid rocket motors and aircraft Gatling guns, he has studied the very quiet and the very loud with colleagues and students. His primary professional interests are in physical acoustics, noise, and acoustics education. In 2010, he received the R. Bruce Lindsay award from the ASA, but his kids are far more impressed with his alter ego, Dr. Boom, who loves nothing more than to explode hydrogen-oxygen balloons for (earplug-wearing) elementary school children.
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