Morpheus Lab  
 
search





The National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded Aerospace Engineering Assistant Professor Stuart Laurence a 2018 Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award for his project, “Effects of thermal nonequilibrium on the acoustic noise radiated by a compressible turbulent boundary layer.”

According to Laurence, in gaseous flows over solid surfaces, the thin near-wall region can become chaotic and turbulent; these turbulent motions can then cause the generation of intense, outward-propagating sound waves, especially when the flow is supersonic. This project seeks to understand such noise generation when the gas in question (e.g., carbon dioxide, or high-temperature air) absorbs sound waves at certain frequencies.

In particular, it is thought that by introducing such a gas into a near-surface flow of air, the noise generation can be reduced in configurations such as high-speed wind tunnels, where this noise can severely contaminate measurements. In conjunction, a variety of educational activities will be undertaken to introduce students at all levels to high-speed flows, including the creation of a YouTube channel where students can suggest objects to be flown in a Mach-8 wind tunnel.

 



August 3, 2018


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

UMD Team Advances Mission Concept for 2029 Asteroid Flyby

Summer Interns Build Pro-Level Skills at UROC

Akin Receives 2025 ICES Award for Technical Excellence

Two UMD Teams Among Twelve Selected for NASA’s M2M X-Hab Challenge

Team “Crossfire” Advances to Phase II of XPRIZE Wildfire Semifinals

Soliton Signatures: A New Strategy for Tracking Teeny Tiny Space Debris

Gebhardt Named 2025-26 MWC ARCS Scholar

Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship

Marge Donovan: Cooking Up Innovation in Rotorcraft Blade Design

Robot-Assisted Triage: UMD Team Answers the Challenge

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home aero umd NIA NASA