Next |
Prev |
Up |
Top
|
Index |
JOS Index |
JOS Pubs |
JOS Home |
Search
The volume velocity
of a gas flow is defined as particle
velocity
times the cross-sectional area
of the flow, or
where
denotes position along the flow, and
denotes time in
seconds. Volume velocity is thus in physical units of volume per
second (m
/s).
When a flow is confined within an enclosed channel, as it is in an
acoustic tube, volume velocity is conserved when the tube
changes cross-sectional area, assuming the density
remains
constant. This follows directly from conservation of mass in a flow:
The total mass passing a given point
along the flow is given by
the mass density
times the integral of the volume volume
velocity at that point, or
As a simple example, consider a constant flow through two cylindrical
acoustic tube sections having cross-sectional areas
and
,
respectively. If the particle velocity in cylinder 1 is
, then
the particle velocity in cylinder 2 may be found by solving
for
.
It is common in the field of acoustics to denote volume velocity by an
upper-case
. Thus, for the two-cylinder acoustic tube example above,
we would define
and
, so that
would express the conservation of volume velocity from one tube
segment to the next.
Next |
Prev |
Up |
Top
|
Index |
JOS Index |
JOS Pubs |
JOS Home |
Search
[How to cite this work] [Order a printed hardcopy] [Comment on this page via email]