TY - GEN
T1 - Fantastic vibroacoustic resources and where to find them
AU - Hambric, Stephen A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Proceedings of 2020 International Congress on Noise Control Engineering, INTER-NOISE 2020. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/8/23
Y1 - 2020/8/23
N2 - The internet is full of fantastic vibroacoustic resources. In this paper I provide descriptions and links to teaching websites, reports, articles, and software that any vibroacoustician would find useful. Articles and reports include: Eric Ungar's humorous and insightful series Acoustics from A to Z, Arthur Leissa's classic compendia of mode shapes and frequencies for plates and shells, Pete Avitable's cartoons and short articles on the basics of Experimental Modal Analysis (EMA), classic Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA) references, general guidance on vibroacoustic analysis of space structures from the European Space Agency, and many others. ISVR and Penn State host outstanding teaching sites full of animations of vibroacoustic phenomena. Modern python-based software are also freely available for EMA, Finite Element (FE) structural analysis, and Boundary Element (BE) acoustic analysis. Finally, we must all remember Jack Mowry's wonderful magazine Sound and Vibration, the archives of which are still available and contain a vast number of practical articles. Join me as I navigate the internet and show you where to find these Fantastic Vibroacoustic Resources!.
AB - The internet is full of fantastic vibroacoustic resources. In this paper I provide descriptions and links to teaching websites, reports, articles, and software that any vibroacoustician would find useful. Articles and reports include: Eric Ungar's humorous and insightful series Acoustics from A to Z, Arthur Leissa's classic compendia of mode shapes and frequencies for plates and shells, Pete Avitable's cartoons and short articles on the basics of Experimental Modal Analysis (EMA), classic Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA) references, general guidance on vibroacoustic analysis of space structures from the European Space Agency, and many others. ISVR and Penn State host outstanding teaching sites full of animations of vibroacoustic phenomena. Modern python-based software are also freely available for EMA, Finite Element (FE) structural analysis, and Boundary Element (BE) acoustic analysis. Finally, we must all remember Jack Mowry's wonderful magazine Sound and Vibration, the archives of which are still available and contain a vast number of practical articles. Join me as I navigate the internet and show you where to find these Fantastic Vibroacoustic Resources!.
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M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85101303766
T3 - Proceedings of 2020 International Congress on Noise Control Engineering, INTER-NOISE 2020
BT - Proceedings of 2020 International Congress on Noise Control Engineering, INTER-NOISE 2020
A2 - Jeon, Jin Yong
PB - Korean Society of Noise and Vibration Engineering
T2 - 49th International Congress and Exposition on Noise Control Engineering, INTER-NOISE 2020
Y2 - 23 August 2020 through 26 August 2020
ER -