A flue organ pipe can be excited in various acoustic modes by changing the air pressure supplied to it. This research aims to reconstruct this behavior from the result of numerical flow simulation of a jet deflected by sound and from physical modeling simulation of the total sound production system. In the numerical flow simulation, motion of the jet in the pipe mouth was replicated: The jet emerges from a flue and travels in a space where the air oscillates laterally to the jet direction. As a result, the jet oscillates with the same frequency as the oscillation of the air i.e., sound. From the flow simulation, a model of the jet deflection was developed. This model was then used as a model of the sound source in the physical modeling simulation where not only the sound source but the resonance of the pipe is also modeled in a set of differential equations with delayed feedback. The mode transition observed in the physical modeling simulation was discussed by comparing with that experimentally observed.
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May 2008
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May 01 2008
Mode transition of a flue organ pipe Free
Seiji Adachi;
Seiji Adachi
Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics, Nobelstrasse 12, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany, [email protected]
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Judit Angster;
Judit Angster
Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics, Nobelstrasse 12, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany, [email protected]
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Andras Miklos
Andras Miklos
Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics, Nobelstrasse 12, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany, [email protected]
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Seiji Adachi
Judit Angster
Andras Miklos
Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics, Nobelstrasse 12, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 123, 3017 (2008)
Citation
Seiji Adachi, Judit Angster, Andras Miklos; Mode transition of a flue organ pipe. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 May 2008; 123 (5_Supplement): 3017. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.2932627
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