(aerospace engineering) The linearized small-disturbance theory used to predict the approximate airflow past an airfoil when the disturbance velocities caused by the flow are small compared to the flight speed and to the speed of sound.
Acoustic theory is the field relating to mathematical description of sound waves. It is derived from fluid dynamics. See acoustics for the engineering approach.
The propagation of sound waves in a fluid (such as water) can be modeled by an equation of motion (conservation of momentum) and an equation of continuity (conservation of mass). With some simplifications, in particular constant density, they can be given as follows:

where
is the acoustic pressure and
is the acoustic fluid velocity vector,
is the vector of spatial coordinates
,
is the time,
is the static mass density of the medium and
is the bulk modulus of the medium. The bulk modulus can be expressed in terms of the density and the speed of sound in the medium (
) as

The acoustic wave equation is a combination of these two sets of balance equations and can be expressed as [1]

The acoustic wave equation (and the mass and momentum balance equations) are often expressed in terms of a scalar potential
where
. In that case the acoustic wave equation is written as

and the momentum balance and mass balance are expressed as

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The derivations of the above equations for waves in an acoustic medium are given below.
The equations for the conservation of linear momentum for a fluid medium are

where
is the body force per unit mass,
is the pressure, and
is the deviatoric stress. If
is the Cauchy stress, then

where
is the rank-2 identity tensor.
We make several assumptions to derive the momentum balance equation for an acoustic medium. These assumptions and the resulting forms of the momentum equations are outlined below.
In acoustics, the fluid medium is assumed to be Newtonian. For a Newtonian fluid, the deviatoric stress tensor is related to the velocity by
![\boldsymbol{s} = \mu~\left[\nabla\mathbf{v} + (\nabla\mathbf{v})^T\right] +
\lambda~(\nabla \cdot \mathbf{v})~\boldsymbol{\mathit{1}}](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/f/4/a/f4afb73a125fb140f82e2d15d65bdc20.png)
where
is the shear viscosity and
is the bulk viscosity.
Therefore, the divergence of
is given by
![\begin{align}
\nabla\cdot\boldsymbol{s} \equiv \cfrac{\partial s_{ij}}{\partial x_i} & =
\mu \left[\cfrac{\partial}{\partial x_i}\left(\cfrac{\partial v_i}{\partial x_j}+\cfrac{\partial v_j}{\partial x_i}\right)\right] + \lambda~\left[\cfrac{\partial}{\partial x_i}\left(\cfrac{\partial v_k}{\partial x_k}\right)\right]\delta_{ij} \\
& = \mu~\cfrac{\partial^2 v_i}{\partial x_i \partial x_j} + \mu~\cfrac{\partial^2 v_j}{\partial x_i\partial x_i} + \lambda~\cfrac{\partial^2 v_k}{\partial x_k\partial x_j} \\
& = (\mu + \lambda)~\cfrac{\partial^2 v_i}{\partial x_i \partial x_j} + \mu~\cfrac{\partial^2 v_j}{\partial x_i^2} \\
& \equiv (\mu + \lambda)~\nabla(\nabla\cdot\mathbf{v}) + \mu~\nabla^2\mathbf{v} ~.
\end{align}](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/5/a/f/5af887409ef9d87855c5af15b98aa751.png)
Using the identity
, we have

The equations for the conservation of momentum may then be written as

For most acoustics problems we assume that the flow is irrotational, that is, the vorticity is zero. In that case

and the momentum equation reduces to

Another frequently made assumption is that effect of body forces on the fluid medium is negligible. The momentum equation then further simplifies to

Additionally, if we assume that there are no viscous forces in the medium (the bulk and shear viscosities are zero), the momentum equation takes the form

An important simplifying assumption for acoustic waves is that the amplitude of the disturbance of the field quantities is small. This assumption leads to the linear or small signal acoustic wave equation. Then we can express the variables as the sum of the (time averaged) mean field (
) that varies in space and a small fluctuating field (
) that varies in space and time. That is

and

Then the momentum equation can be expressed as
![\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right] \left[\frac{\partial\tilde{\mathbf{v}}}{\partial t} + \left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\right] \cdot \nabla \left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\right]\right] = -\nabla \left[\langle p\rangle+\tilde{p}\right]](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/8/e/c/8ec338be9ebcd030fbd9968dcad3c1e0.png)
Since the fluctuations are assumed to be small, products of the fluctuation terms can be neglected (to first order) and we have
![\begin{align}
\langle\rho\rangle~\frac{\partial\tilde{\mathbf{v}}}{\partial t} & +
\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\cdot\nabla \langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\right]+
\langle\rho\rangle\left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\cdot\nabla\tilde{\mathbf{v}} +
\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\cdot\nabla\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\right] \\
& = -\nabla \left[\langle p\rangle+\tilde{p}\right]
\end{align}](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/9/f/d/9fd91e3ee13844ed7e09ea3e988bc889.png)
Next we assume that the medium is homogeneous; in the sense that the time averaged variables
and
have zero gradients, i.e.,

The momentum equation then becomes
![\langle\rho\rangle~\frac{\partial\tilde{\mathbf{v}}}{\partial t} +
\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\cdot\nabla \langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\right]+
\langle\rho\rangle\left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\cdot\nabla\tilde{\mathbf{v}} +
\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\cdot\nabla\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle\right]
= -\nabla\tilde{p}](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/6/6/2/6627347053e63b52e5df752880746f34.png)
At this stage we assume that the medium is at rest which implies that the mean velocity is zero, i.e.
. Then the balance of momentum reduces to

Dropping the tildes and using
, we get the commonly used form of the acoustic momentum equation

The equation for the conservation of mass in a fluid volume (without any mass sources or sinks) is given by

where
is the mass density of the fluid and
is the fluid velocity.
The equation for the conservation of mass for an acoustic medium can also be derived in a manner similar to that used for the conservation of momentum.
From the assumption of small disturbances we have

and

Then the mass balance equation can be written as
![\frac{\partial\tilde{\rho}}{\partial t} +
\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\nabla \cdot\left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\right] +
\nabla\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\cdot \left[\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+\tilde{\mathbf{v}}\right]= 0](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/7/7/5/775ab99f818071006ab8ed7affcac658.png)
If we neglect higher than first order terms in the fluctuations, the mass balance equation becomes
![\frac{\partial\tilde{\rho}}{\partial t} +
\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\nabla \cdot\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+
\langle\rho\rangle\nabla\cdot\tilde{\mathbf{v}} +
\nabla\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\cdot\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+
\nabla\langle\rho\rangle\cdot\tilde{\mathbf{v}}= 0](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/e/9/2/e92a65fc06339f0a92a89fcf9909c6fb.png)
Next we assume that the medium is homogeneous, i.e.,

Then the mass balance equation takes the form
![\frac{\partial\tilde{\rho}}{\partial t} +
\left[\langle\rho\rangle+\tilde{\rho}\right]\nabla \cdot\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle+
\langle\rho\rangle\nabla\cdot\tilde{\mathbf{v}} +
\nabla\tilde{\rho}\cdot\langle\mathbf{v}\rangle
= 0](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/9/7/0/9709bb9f83dd6d9112111f8984036e1e.png)
At this stage we assume that the medium is at rest, i.e.,
. Then the mass balance equation can be expressed as

In order to close the system of equations we need an equation of state for the pressure. To do that we assume that the medium is an ideal gas and all acoustic waves compress the medium in an adiabatic and reversible manner. The equation of state can then be expressed in the form of the differential equation:

where
is the specific heat at constant pressure,
is the specific heat at constant volume, and
is the wave speed. The value of
is 1.4 if the acoustic medium is air.
For small disturbances

where
is the speed of sound in the medium.
Therefore,

The balance of mass can then be written as

Dropping the tildes and defining
gives us the commonly used expression for the balance of mass in an acoustic medium:

If we use a cylindrical coordinate system
with basis vectors
, then the gradient of
and the divergence of
are given by

where the velocity has been expressed as
.
The equations for the conservation of momentum may then be written as
![\rho_0~\left[\cfrac{\partial v_r}{\partial t}~\mathbf{e}_r+\cfrac{\partial v_\theta}{\partial t}~\mathbf{e}_\theta+\cfrac{\partial v_z}{\partial t}~\mathbf{e}_z\right] +
\cfrac{\partial p}{\partial r}~\mathbf{e}_r + \cfrac{1}{r}~\cfrac{\partial p}{\partial \theta}~\mathbf{e}_\theta + \cfrac{\partial p}{\partial z}~\mathbf{e}_z = 0](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/4/3/9/4398f03b3ff85312b3626ba44136323c.png)
In terms of components, these three equations for the conservation of momentum in cylindrical coordinates are

The equation for the conservation of mass can similarly be written in cylindrical coordinates as
![\cfrac{\partial p}{\partial t} + \kappa\left[\cfrac{\partial v_r}{\partial r} + \cfrac{1}{r}\left(\cfrac{\partial v_\theta}{\partial \theta} + v_r\right) + \cfrac{\partial v_z}{\partial z}\right] = 0 ~.](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/1/9/7/197b16688d2964de95aa3f195a87eb2d.png)
The acoustic equations for the conservation of momentum and the conservation of mass are often expressed in time harmonic form (at fixed frequency). In that case, the pressures and the velocity are assumed to be time harmonic functions of the form

where
is the frequency. Substitution of these expressions into the governing equations in cylindrical coordinates gives us the fixed frequency form of the conservation of momentum

and the fixed frequency form of the conservation of mass

In the special case where the field quantities are independent of the z-coordinate we can eliminate
to get

Assuming that the solution of this equation can be written as

we can write the partial differential equation as

The left hand side is not a function of
while the right hand side is not a function of
. Hence,

where
is a constant. Using the substitution

we have

The equation on the left is the Bessel equation which has the general solution

where
is the cylindrical Bessel function of the first kind and
are undetermined constants. The equation on the right has the general solution

where
are undetermined constants. Then the solution of the acoustic wave equation is
![p(r,\theta) = \left[A_\alpha~J_\alpha(k~r) + B_\alpha~J_{-\alpha}(k~r)\right]\left(C_\alpha~e^{i\alpha\theta} + D_\alpha~e^{-i\alpha\theta}\right)](http://wpcontent.answcdn.com/wikipedia/en/math/e/1/c/e1c26e00673349e0391619c757599c16.png)
Boundary conditions are needed at this stage to determine
and the other undetermined constants.
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