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A Flight Research Overview of WSPR, a Pilot Project for Sonic Boom Community ResponseIn support of NASAs ongoing effort to bring supersonic commercial travel to the public, NASA Dryden Flight Research Center and NASA Langley Research Center, in cooperation with other industry organizations, conducted a flight research experiment to identify the methods, tools, and best practices for a large-scale quiet (or low) sonic boom community human response test. The name of the effort was Waveforms and Sonic boom Perception and Response. Such tests will go towards building a dataset that governing agencies like the Federal Aviation Administration and International Civil Aviation Organization will use to establish regulations for acceptable sound levels of overland sonic booms. Until WSPR, there had never been an effort that studied the response of people in their own homes and performing daily activities to non-traditional, low sonic booms.WSPR was a NASA collaborative effort with several industry partners, in response to a NASA Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate Research Opportunities in Aeronautics. The primary contractor was Wyle. Other partners included Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation, Pennsylvania State University, Tetra Tech, and Fidell Associates, Inc.A major objective of the effort included exposing a community with the sonic boom magnitudes and occurrences expected in high-air traffic regions with a network of supersonic commercial aircraft in place. Low-level sonic booms designed to simulate those produced by the next generation of commercial supersonic aircraft were generated over a small residential community. The sonic boom footprint was recorded with an autonomous wireless microphone array that spanned the entire community. Human response data was collected using multiple survey methods. The research focused on essential elements of community response testing including subject recruitment, survey methods, instrumentation systems, flight planning and operations, and data analysis methods.This paper focuses on NASAs role in the efforts logistics and operations including human response subject recruitment, the operational processes involved in implementing the surveys throughout the community, instrumentation systems, logistics, flight planning, and flight operations. Findings discussed in this paper include critical lessons learned in all of those areas. The paper also discusses flight operations results. Analysis of the accuracy and repeatability of planning and executing the unique aircraft maneuver used to generate low sonic booms concluded that the sonic booms had overpressures within 0.15 pounds-per-square-feet of the planned values for 76 of t he attempts. Similarly, 90 of the attempts to generate low sonic booms within the community were successful.
Document ID
20140008657
Acquisition Source
Armstrong Flight Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Cliatt, Larry James
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Haering, Ed
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Jones, Thomas P.
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Waggoner, Erin R.
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Flattery, Ashley K.
(NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center Edwards, CA, United States)
Wiley, Scott L.
(Jacobs Technology, Inc. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
July 2, 2014
Publication Date
June 16, 2014
Subject Category
Aerodynamics
Acoustics
Report/Patent Number
DFRC-E-DAA-TN15116
Report Number: DFRC-E-DAA-TN15116
Meeting Information
Meeting: AIAA Applied Aerodynamics Conference
Location: Atlanta, GA
Country: United States
Start Date: June 16, 2014
End Date: June 20, 2014
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 475122.02.02.04.03.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NND08RR01B
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
sonic booms
supersonic aircraft
flight research
community response
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