Title :
Near-field acoustic resonance scattering of a finite bessel beam by an elastic sphere
Author_Institution :
Area 52 Technol., Chevron Corp., Santa Fe, NM, USA
Abstract :
The near-field acoustic scattering from a sphere centered on the axis of a finite Bessel acoustic beam is derived stemming from the Rayleigh-Sommerfeld diffraction surface integral and the addition theorems for the spherical wave and Legendre functions. The beam emerges from a finite circular disk vibrating according to one of its radial modes corresponding to the fundamental solution of a Bessel beam J0. The incident pressure field´s expression is derived analytically as a partial-wave series expansion, taking into account the finite size and the distance from the center of the disk transducer. Initially, the scattered pressure by a rigid sphere is evaluated, and backscattering pressure moduli plots as well as 3-D directivity patterns for an elastic PMMA sphere centered on a finite Bessel beam with appropriate tuning of its half-cone angle reveal possible resonance suppression of the sphere only in the zone near the Bessel transducer. Moreover, the analysis is extended to derive the mean spatial incident and scattered pressures at the surface of a rigid circular receiver of infinitesimal thickness. The transducer, sphere, and receiver are assumed to be coaxial. Some applications can result from the present analysis because all physically realizable Bessel beam sources radiate finite sound beams as opposed to waves of infinite extent.
Keywords :
acoustic receivers; acoustic resonance; acoustic transducers; acoustic wave scattering; beams (structures); discs (structures); elasticity; wave functions; Bessel beam sources radiate finite sound beams; Legendre functions; Rayleigh-Sommerfeld diffraction surface integral theorem; disk transducer; elastic sphere; finite Bessel acoustic beam; finite circular disk; incident pressure field expression; near-field acoustic resonance scattering; partial-wave series expansion; receiver; spherical wave function; Acoustic beams; Acoustics; Backscatter; Scattering; Solids; Transducers; Vibrations;
Journal_Title :
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TUFFC.2014.2957