NASA Instruments Will Listen for Supersonic X-59?s Quiet ?Thump?
NASA?s X-59 experimental aircraft is unique ? it?s designed to fly faster than the speed of sound, but without causing a loud sonic boom. To confirm the X-59?s ability to fly supersonic while only producing quiet sonic "thumps," NASA needs to be able to record these sounds from the ground. The agency recently completed tests aimed at understanding equipment and procedures needed to make those recordings.
NASA?s Carpet Determination In Entirety Measurements (CarpetDIEM) flights examined the quality and ruggedness of a new generation of ground recording systems, focusing on how to deploy the systems for X-59 testing, and retrieve the data they collect. In all, researchers set up 10 microphone stations over a 30-mile stretch of desert near NASA?s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California.
"We?re trying to answer questions like how many people does it take to go out and service these instruments on a daily basis, how to get the data back, how many vehicles are needed ? all those sorts of things on how we operate," said Forrest Carpenter, principal investigator for the third flight series, known as CarpetDIEM III. "We?re kind of learning how to dance now so that when we get to the big dance, we?re ready to go."
The X-59 itself is not yet flying, so using an F-15 and an F-18 from NASA Armstrong, the CarpetDIEM III testing involved 20 supersonic passes with speeds ranging from Mach 1.15 to Mach 1.4, at altitudes ranging from 40,000 to 53,000 feet. Three of the passes involved an F-18 conducting a special inverted dive maneuver to simulate a quiet sonic boom, with one getting as quiet as 67 perceived level decibels, a measure of the perceived noisiness of the jet for an observer on the ground.
"We expect the X-59 sonic thump to be as low as about 75 perceived loudness decibels," said Larry Cliatt, sub-project manager for the Quesst acoustic validation phase. "That is a lot quieter than the Concord, which was over 100 perceived loudness decibels."
In order to measure these very quiet sonic thumps, the ground recording systems used in the CarpetDIEM flights were calibrated to measure as low as about 50 perceived loudness decibels ? the equivalent to being in the room with a running refrigerator.
CarpetDIEM III also validated the use of Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast, an existing technology flown on all commercial aircraft and most private aircraft to report speed and position. This system triggers the ground recording systems to begin recording.
"We can?t have 70 different people at every single instrumentation box," Cliatt said. "We had to find a way to automate that process."
The recording systems are designed to withstand the desert elements, the extreme heat of summer and the cold of winter, and to be resistant to damage from wildlife, such as chewing by rodents, coyotes, and foxes.
"When we get to Phase 2 of the Quesst mission, we expect to be doing these recordings of sonic thumps for up to nine months," Cliatt said. "We need to be able to have instrumentation and operations that can facilitate such a long deployment."
Another lesson learned ? setup time for the recording stations was just under an hour, compared to the anticipated 2 1/2 hours. Given the performance of the systems, the team will assess whether they need to visit all the sites every day of Phase 2 testing.
The team also learned about the coordination and documentation processes needed for such research, both with internal organizations, such as NASA Armstrong?s Environmental and Safety offices, and with outside parties including:
To prepare for Quesst Phase 2, researchers expect to conduct practice sessions in 2024, incorporating all the lessons learned and best practices from all three phases of CarpetDIEM.
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