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( McNeese Everest Speed of Sound ) Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility Palestine,Tx May 2008
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9/8/20152 Team Members Mukesh Wagle - Team Leader Sovit Poudel - Team Acquisitions Officer Parash Maharjan - Computer Specialist Dilip Roshan Das - Payload Structural Engineer Sunit Pradhan - Team Scientific Research Specialist David Hughes - Team Assistant Charles McAdon – Team Assistant
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9/8/20153 The Sound of Titan: inspiration for MESS On 14th January 2005 the Huygens probe landed on the surface of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. As part of Surface Science Package (SSP) was the Acoustic Properties Instrument-Velocimeter (API-V): a senser aimed to measure the speed of sound in a hydrocarbon sea or lake, should Huygens land in a liquid.
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9/8/20154 As Huygens landed on a solid surface only atmospheric measurements were made. These are among the few measurements of the speed of sound made in a remote planetary atmosphere. The speed of sound in a non-ideal gas, such as Titan’s lower atmosphere, is dependent upon composition, temperature and pressure. The Sound of Titan: inspiration for MESS
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9/8/20155 Alien Sounds Using the speed of sound, pressure, and temperature measurements from Huygens it is possible to estimate the methane content of Titan’s atmosphere below 11 km, given some simple initial constraints. http___www.sciencedirect.com_science__ob=MImg&_imagekey=B6WGF-4N5CXK1-3- 1&_cdi=6821&_user=6996916&_orig=&_coverDate=08%2F31%2F2007&_sk=998109997&view=c&wchp=dGLbVz W-zSkzk&md5=e333f3104ff9be0618c15617fb70cfd2&ie=_sdarticle
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9/8/20156 Scientific Goal The velocity of sounds depends on several physical parameters that are both independent of chemical composition (like the temperature of the gas), density and bulk modulus of the medium, that are characteristic of the particular chemical composition of the medium. Consequently, the speed of sound could be used to determine (if environmental parameters like the temperature of the gas are known) the precise combination of individual gases present in the medium. We will use similar methods to determine the chemical composition of the Earth‘s atmosphere even if it is a well known quantity. This is in the following of the spirit of the LA- ACES program that invites the students’ teams to pretend they are exploring the Earth as a space mission would when it explores another world.
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9/8/20157 We are going to use our data from the speed of sound as a function of altitude to set limits on the chemical composition of the atmosphere as if it was an unknown alien planet. We are going to use a method based on Bayesian analysis as in the article: Speed of sound measurements and the methane abundance in Titan’s atmosphere A. Hagermann a, ∗, P.D. Rosenberg a, M.C. Towner a, J.R.C. Garry b, H. Svedhemc, M.R. Leese a, B. Hathi a, R.D. Lorenza,d,1, J.C. Zarnecki a The Sound of Titan: inspiration for MESS
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9/8/20158 Technical Goal Measure the changes in the velocity of sound as a function of altitude and compare those changes with theory based on standard atmosphere model and ideal gas relationship between velocity and temperature. Record sound at a sampling rate of 96000 Hz Survivability of payload electronic equipment Structural integrity of the payload box
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9/8/20159 Velocity of Sound in the Atmosphere The velocity of sound depends on atmospheric conditions; the most important factor is the temperature. Air pressure has almost no effect on the velocity. In an ideal gas approximation, since pressure and density both contribute to sound velocity equally, the two effects cancel out, leaving only the effect of temperature. Sound usually travels slowly at higher altitude due to lower temperature (but speeds up in the stratosphere due to heating within the ozone layer). Humidity has a small, but measurable effect on the speed. Sound travels slightly (0.1%-0.6%) faster in humid air. The approximate speed of sound in 0% humidity (dry air), at temperature near 0 °C, can be calculated by using the following formula: Where T is the temperature in degrees Celsius. At sea level, at a temperature of 21 °C (70 °F) and under normal atmospheric conditions, the speed of sound is 344 m/s.
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9/8/201510 Velocity of Sound in the Atmosphere AltitudeTemperaturem·s -1 km·h -1 mphknots Sea level15 °C (59 °F)3401225761661 11 000 m−20 000 m (Cruising altitude of commercial jets, and first supersonic flight) -57 °C (-70 °F)2951062660573 29 000 m (Flight of X-43A) LA-ACES max altitude -48 °C (-53 °F)3011083673585
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9/8/201511 Velocity of Sound in the Atmosphere Velocity and Temperature vs Altitude
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9/8/201512 Velocity of Sound in the Atmosphere Velocity and Percentage Diff (with respect to the ground) vs Altitude
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9/8/201513 MESS experiment to measure sound’s velocity According to the standard wave relationship between velocity, wavelength and frequency, If we produce a wave with fixed frequency, a change in velocity will result in a change in wavelength. Measuring the wavelength will allow us to calculate the change in the velocity of sound. We can measure the wavelength of the wave with a simple experimental setup.
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9/8/201514 Speaker Microphone 1 Left channel Microphone 2 Right channel 33 cm PMC Linear Digital Recorder Stereo HQ (96000 Hz Sampling Frequency) There is an arrival time LAG between the two microphone, that we can use to measure the wavelength of the sound wave. The distance between the microphone and the speaker should be farther than at least one wave length. to have the microphones in the radiation zone. Sound with a simple sinusoidal signal With a fixed frequency of 1920 Hz
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9/8/201515 Mathematical model of the sound amplitude recorded by the microphones. If we set the origin at the first microphone the sound wave amplitude can be described as: At the same instant of time the amplitude at the second microphone will be With some simple math tricks we can extract the value k from the data (and therefore measure the wavelength). Where: Distance between the microphones wave number where Frequency of the speaker’s sound wave
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9/8/201516 Math used to extract the velocity from our data (if you are interested) Start with adding the two signals and using the trig identity: We obtain: Constant So the sum of the two signals is a simple sine function with frequency f. For any given sine function: It is well know that: Then in our case we have that: and and finally then
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9/8/201517 Results from our experiment (room temperature, 21 Celsius, sea level)
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9/8/201518 500 Hz
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9/8/201519 The data points represent values of the measured speed of sound as a function of time (averages over 0.25 seconds) with errors bars with widths of one standard deviation (1.5 % of average value). The green line is the theoretical value expected for the given temperature of 23 degree Celsius. The result of our tests
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9/8/201520 The data samples are taken over each period. The average value is shifted with respect to the theoretical value (represented by the star). This is a relatively small systematic error (5 % from expected value ) due to the uncertainty of the orientation of the sound source center at the speaker. Considering this as a calibration issue, we have changed our effective distance to compensate for this systematic error. The Gaussian behavior of the noise in our data
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9/8/201521 Mission Operations The recorder and the player will be turned on and data will be stored in the memory of the recorder. All components will be placed properly inside the box and sealed. The digital recorder will actually begin collecting data about 15 minutes before the launch. We will use stop watch or voice commands (launch!, increased noise from freefalling, box landing) to synchronize our data with the altitude information.
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9/8/201522 Payload Design The main part of the payload is the Digital Recorder and Player. Olympus LS-10 player will produce the sinusoidal control sound wave. Two microphones will record sound. A speaker will emit the sound waves during the whole experiment.
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9/8/201523 System Design A digital recorder will be connected in stereo to the microphones. A player will produce the sinusoidal wave through a speaker attached on the side of the box.
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9/8/201524 Thermal Design Insulating Materials were used in the inner compartments of the payload to reduce heat loss. Also, tests performed on the box found that it is quite resistive to temperature change when covered in aluminum foil and a reflective tape. We did some experiments operating our payload in a freezer at -80 o C for extended period(about 35 minutes) without encountering any problems.
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9/8/201525 Data Acquisition and Analysis Data will be recorded to the Digital Voice Recorder. Sampling Frequency will be 96,000 Hz. The player will be able to record and store over 2. 5(?) hours of high quality sound A 4GB memory card will be used to store the data. The data will be extracted via USB onto our computers. Data will be analyzed using MatLab.
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9/8/201526 Budget Expense Budget Box Structure$ 10 Recorders(2X) $ 800 Speaker (Sony T-30)$ 25 Microphones$ 25 Batteries (AAA, AA)$ 12 Tape, glue, straw, insulation$ 10 Miscellaneous $ 5 ________________________________ Total$ 877
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9/8/201527 Budget Cont. Weight Budget Compromisation Our weight per area calculation meets Federal Aviation Administration standards requirements of 8 ounces per sq. inch. However we could not have it within 500 gm due to the long structure of the box and relatively heavier recorders.
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9/8/201528 Special Thanks... Dr. Santostasi Giovanni LA-ACES Organizers NASA Employees
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