arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Acoustic End-of-Line Test Systems See All DAQ and instruments See All Electroacoustics See All Software See All Transducers See All Vibration Testing Equipment See All Academy See All Resource Center See All Applications See All Industries See All Insights See All Services See All Support See All Our Business See All Our History See All Our Sustainability Commitment See All Global Presence
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Actuators See All Combustion Engines See All Durability See All eDrive See All Production Testing Sensors See All Transmission & Gearboxes See All Turbo Charger See All DAQ Systems See All High Precision and Calibration Systems See All Industrial electronics See All Power Analyser See All S&V Hand-held devices See All S&V Signal conditioner See All Test Solutions See All DAQ Software See All Drivers & API See All nCode - Durability and Fatigue Analysis See All ReliaSoft - Reliability Analysis and Management See All Test Data Management See All Utility See All Vibration Control See All Acoustic See All Current / voltage See All Displacement See All Load Cells See All Pressure See All Strain Gauges See All Torque See All Vibration See All LDS Shaker Systems See All Power Amplifiers See All Vibration Controllers See All Accessories for Vibration Testing Equipment See All Training Courses See All Whitepapers See All Acoustics See All Asset & Process Monitoring See All Custom Sensors See All Data Acquisition & Analysis See All Durability & Fatigue See All Electric Power Testing See All NVH See All Reliability See All Smart Sensors See All Vibration See All Weighing See All Automotive & Ground Transportation See All Calibration See All Installation, Maintenance & Repair See All Support Brüel & Kjær See All Release Notes See All Compliance See All Our People
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All CANHEAD See All GenHS See All LAN-XI See All MGCplus See All Optical Interrogators See All QuantumX See All SomatXR See All Accessories See All Accessories See All BK Connect / Pulse See All API See All Microphone Sets See All Microphone Cartridges See All Acoustic Calibrators See All Special Microphones See All Microphone Pre-amplifiers See All Sound Sources See All Accessories for acoustic transducers See All Experimental testing See All Transducer Manufacturing (OEM) See All Accessories See All Non-rotating (calibration) See All Rotating See All CCLD (IEPE) accelerometers See All Charge Accelerometers See All Impulse hammers / impedance heads See All Cables See All Accessories See All Electroacoustics See All Noise Source Identification See All Environmental Noise See All Sound Power and Sound Pressure See All Noise Certification See All Industrial Process Control See All Structural Health Monitoring See All Electrical Devices Testing See All Electrical Systems Testing See All Grid Testing See All High-Voltage Testing See All Vibration Testing with Electrodynamic Shakers See All Structural Dynamics See All Machine Analysis and Diagnostics See All Calibration Services for Transducers See All Calibration Services for Handheld Instruments See All Calibration Services for Instruments & DAQ See All On-Site Calibration See All Resources See All Software License Management

How Weather Effects On Noise Measurements


The customer wants the report by next week and you are waiting for suitable weather conditions before you can measure. In practice, meteorology requirements are often difficult to fulfil, particularly if you have a deadline. It is no wonder that weather requirements are sometimes glossed over.
Acoustic Camera
WHITEPAPER
FROM SOUND LEVEL METER TO ACOUSTIC CAMERA

A number of meteorological and atmospheric factors, which vary as a function of time, will combine to influence the propagation of sound. Actually, for any given measurement point, the measured result is dependent on weather conditions at the time of the measurement.

Backed by field measurements, this article provides a practical look at the effect of weather conditions on noise levels in order to raise awareness of the importance of meteorology in noise measurements.

Noise Propagation Explained

Noise is essentially a sound wave that, if isotropic, will radiate outwards equally in all directions from the source. Noise levels decrease as the distance increases between the source and the receiver, due to geometric dispersion.

Without any form of atmospheric variation, the sound will decrease by 6 dB per doubling of distance. This law holds true until factors, described below, begin to influence propagation.

Noise levels decrease as the distance increases between the source and the receiver

Distance from source to the receiver

The most important factor to consider is the distance from the source to the receiver. For many outdoor noise assessments, noise-sensitive receptors are relatively close to the noise source, and in this case, meteorological factors will have a negligible effect.

But how close is close? There is no hard and fast rule, but the ISO 1996-2:2007 standard offers formula and a table to calculate the resulting uncertainty, depending on the heights of the source and receiver and the source-receiver distance.

Distance from source to receiver table

Wind Speed and Direction When Measuring

Wind speed and direction, even over short periods, are important factors affecting measurements.

Wind blowing from the noise source towards the measurement location increases levels, and the stronger the wind, the greater the effect, until the wind becomes so turbulent that the wind itself becomes the dominant noise source. Therefore legislation sets limits and makes recommendations on acceptable wind speed and direction.

Wind Gradients and Deviating Sound Levels

Wind gradients are caused by friction between the ground and the wind. Thus, wind speed increases with altitude, bending the path of sound to ‘focus’ it on the downwind side, making a ‘shadow’ on the upwind side of the source.

Downwind, the level may increase by a few decibels, depending on wind speed. But when measuring upwind or side-wind, the level can drop by over 20 dB, depending on wind speed and distance This is why downwind measurement is preferred – the deviation is smaller, and the result is a conservative ‘worst case’.

Temperature Gradients and Sound Propagation

slm-icon-3-2245
FROM SIMPLE TO ADVANCED
SOUND LEVEL METERS AND VIBRATION METERS

Temperature gradients in the atmosphere also impact sound propagation over long distances. On a typical sunny afternoon, the air is warmest near the ground with temperature decreasing with altitude. This causes sound waves to refract upward, away from the ground, and results in lower noise levels at the listener’s position. In the evening, this temperature gradient will reverse, resulting in cooler temperatures near the ground. This condition often referred to as a temperature inversion, will cause the sound to bend downwards toward the ground and results in louder noise levels at the listener position.

Like wind gradients, temperature gradients can influence sound propagation over long distances.

Temperature gradients

Effect of temperature gradients: typical day and evening scenarios. Environmental noise, Brüel & Kjær 2001

Atmospheric Attenuation and Frequency

Everyone has heard a concert from a great distance: the high frequencies attenuate and only a muffled bass dominates the remaining sound. Atmospheric attenuation is a physical factor that changes the frequency content of the sound in the air.

The figure below illustrates this effect. In the vast majority of environmental assessments, given the distances and frequencies involved, this factor is negligible.

Attenuation of sound in air

Attenuation of sound in air as a function of distance and frequency. Environmental noise, Brüel & Kjær 2001

Temperature and Humidity In Sound Measurements

Temperature and humidity affect sound measurements. With a fixed temperature at 15ºC, a decrease in relative humidity from 80% to 20% would decrease the sound level at a listener standing 800 m from the noise source by 3 dB (at 1000 Hz). Although humidity changes slowly, this is a factor that affects measurement repeatability.

Fixing the relative humidity at 80%, an increase in temperature from 15 ºC to 30 ºC would decrease the sound level 800 m from the noise source by 3 dB (at 1000 Hz). Temperature variations of this order of magnitude are not uncommon during a 24-hour period.

National standards may vary in the way the effect of weather should be treated in environmental noise measurements, so refer to your local standards for more information.