(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO — October 16, 2023 —Southwest Research Institute’s aerospace acoustic test chamber can now simulate the complex and harsh acoustic environment associated with the thunderous noise of a rocket launch to ensure that space systems can endure blastoff conditions. The test chamber is the newest addition to SwRI’s 74,000-square-foot Space System Spacecraft and Payload Processing Facility, created to rapidly respond to customers needing to design, assemble and test spacecraft, particularly small satellites.
“During lift off, rocket engine vibrations compress the air inside the rocket fairing, pulsating around the spacecraft stored within,” said Institute Engineer Kelly Smith, who oversees the facility. “During takeoff, complex acoustic waves create turbulence in the fairing, conditions we can now simulate in a test chamber right here at SwRI.”
Sound waves emitted during a rocket launch are so powerful that they are hazardous to humans and can damage a spacecraft and its payload before reaching outer space. Shaker tables can evaluate vibration effects. Evaluating whether a spacecraft can withstand powerful sound waves requires an equally powerful acoustic system, which now exists at SwRI.
The high-decibel acoustic chamber’s six speakers collectively produce up to 150 decibels, which can instantly perforate an eardrum. Each speaker is about 3.5 feet tall and weighs 1,617 pounds. All six are housed inside a high-decibel acoustic testing chamber at SwRI’s San Antonio headquarters.
“These are not ordinary speakers that you’d find at a concert,” Smith said. “These tests help ensure that systems don’t fail, with potentially mission-critical and financial implications.”
During testing, the speakers typically encircle a test article but can be moved into custom configurations, depending on the application.
“It’s rare for systems like these to exist at a research and development institute like SwRI,” Smith said. “Normally, these evaluations require third-party testing at significant expense and involve moving hardware offsite, risking damage during transport. Keeping as much of the environmental testing inhouse minimizes risk and costs.”
The system is now conducting inhouse testing, which is available to external clients.
For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/industries/space-engineering.
END
SwRI’s new aerospace acoustic testing system can simulate the deafening noise of a rocket launch
Specially designed speakers can reach up to 150 decibels in SwRI’s Space Systems Integration Facility
2023-10-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A powerful new tool in the fight against one of the deadliest cancers
2023-10-16
Osaka, Japan – Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the deadliest cancers worldwide, with a 5-year survival rate of less than 10%. Many PDAC tumors in early stage go undetected because they are not found using conventional imaging methods, including fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET) scans. To more efficiently combat this pancreatic cancer, a team led by researchers at Osaka University is combining diagnostic and therapeutic procedures into a single integrated process: ‘theranostics’.
In an article recently published in Journal of Nuclear Medicine, the team has developed a ‘radio-theranostics’ strategy that uses a new ...
NYU’s Lerrel Pinto wins Packard Foundation Fellowship
2023-10-16
Lerrel Pinto, an assistant professor at New York University’s Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, has been named a recipient of a 2023 Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering. Pinto was one of 20 scientific researchers to receive a fellowship.
Pinto, named to MIT Technology Review’s “35 Innovators under 35” list earlier this year, is seeking ways to train robots that can perform a variety of tasks—or, as the magazine put it, create robots that “do a lot more than vacuum.”
“Think of a seemingly easy task of opening an unlocked door—something humans can do effortlessly by adapting their approach to ...
National Football League commitment to Nation of Lifesavers supports Hands-Only CPR education for youth
2023-10-16
DALLAS, October 16, 2023 — The National Football League (NFL) Foundation and the American Heart Association are helping kids and their families be confident and capable when faced with a cardiac emergency, adding more people to the Association’s Nation of Lifesavers™ movement. Students who participate in the Association’s in-school program, Kids Heart Challenge™, receive free Hands-Only CPR instruction so they can be confident and capable to respond in a cardiac emergency. More than 350,000 out-of-hospital ...
Clinical trial finds live vaccinations safe for liver, kidney transplant recipients
2023-10-16
Live vaccinations provided to children who previously received liver or kidney transplants were found to be safe and prompted an immune response to guard against several life-threatening conditions, according to a new study published Oct. 12, 2023, in JAMA Network Open.
The study, based on data from 18 organ transplant centers, was co-authored by Lara Danziger-Isakov, MD, MPH, interim director of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Cincinnati Children’s, and Amy Feldman, MD, MSCS, medical director of the Liver Transplant Program at Children’s Hospital Colorado.
The results are important because the ...
Holy immunity! Bat genes key against COVID, cancer
2023-10-16
Bats have acquired remarkable traits throughout their evolution. They’re the only mammals that can fly, and they live much longer than other animals their size. But perhaps most impressive is their robust immune system. It protects bats from viruses that wreak havoc in humans, like COVID-19 or Ebola. It also keeps bats relatively cancer-free. How?
According to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) scientists, it’s all in the genes.
Using samples collected in Belize with Nancy Simmons from the American Museum of Natural History, CSHL Professors W. Richard McCombie and Adam ...
Novel enzyme family could provide insights into bacterial pathogenicity
2023-10-16
Gram-negative bacteria cause a variety of infectious diseases in plants and animals alike. Outbreaks of Salmonella and E. coli infections often make headlines due to their severity, and people have to resort to allopathic as well as natural remedies, increasing the burden on the healthcare system. While antibiotics offer an effective solution against bacterial infections, the increasing incidence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria have prompted researchers to identify other possible treatments against these infections. With technological advances and modern medicine, researchers are looking into the possibility of disrupting the pathogenicity of the bacteria ...
National Poll: Parents of elementary-aged children may engage in more helicopter parenting than they think
2023-10-16
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – As they grow, children start doing certain activities without their parents watching over them, including trick-or-treating with friends, staying home alone or biking to a friend’s house.
And while most parents agree that kids benefit from opportunities to be independent, they may be engaging in more “helicopter parenting” than they realize, suggests a new University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health.
“There’s a sizable gap between parent attitudes about promoting children’s independence and what they actually allow or encourage ...
Local retail outlets for legal marijuana may be associated with alcohol co-use among high school students: Study
2023-10-16
PISCATAWAY, NJ—Given the increasing trend toward legalizing marijuana in many states, there is growing concern that underage youth may find the drug easier to access. In fact, a recent study reported in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs suggests that in areas with local retail availability of legalized marijuana, high school students are more likely to use marijuana and alcohol together, as well as alcohol alone.
“Greater retail availability may ‘normalize’ marijuana use for young people, even if they are unable to purchase marijuana directly from retail businesses, and retail sales may introduce greater access through social ...
Virtual driving assessment predicts risk of crashing for newly licensed teen drivers
2023-10-16
Philadelphia, October 16, 2023 – New research published today by the journal Pediatrics found that driving skills measured at the time of licensure on a virtual driving assessment (VDA), which exposes drivers to common serious crash scenarios, helps predict crash risk in newly licensed young drivers.
This study, conducted by the Center for Injury Research and Prevention (CIRP) at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) with colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Michigan, brings the research community one step closer to identifying which skill deficits put young new drivers at higher risk for crashes. With this cutting-edge information, ...
Treating high-risk drinking, alcohol use disorder: new Canadian guideline
2023-10-16
A new Canadian guideline for treating high-risk drinking and alcohol use disorder (AUD) with 15 evidence-based recommendations to reduce harms associated with high-risk drinking and to support people’s treatment and recovery from AUD is published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.230715.
High-risk drinking, AUD and alcohol-related harms are common in Canada. Nearly 18% of people aged 15 years or older in Canada will meet the clinical criteria for an AUD in their lifetime, and over 50% of people in Canada aged 15 years or older currently ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Customized cells to fight brain cancer
How superstorm Gannon squeezed Earth’s plasmasphere to one-fifth its size
Gene scissors in camouflage mode help in the search for cancer therapies
Breaking the cycle of vulnerability: study identifies modifiable elements to build community resilience and improve health
Millions of people in the UK are being drawn into bribery and money laundering, according to new study
Could a child have painted that? Jackson Pollock's famous pour-painting has child-like characteristics, study shows
Broad support for lethal control of wild deer among nature organisation subscribers
Over a decade in the making: Illuminating new possibilities with lanthanide nanocrystals
Deadly, record-breaking heatwaves will persist for 1,000 years, even under net zero
Maps created by 1960s schoolchildren provide new insights into habitat losses
Cool comfort: beating the heat with high-tech clothes
New study reveals how China can cut nitrogen pollution while safeguarding national food security
Two thirds of women experience too much or too little weight gain in pregnancy
Thousands of NHS doctors trapped in insecure “gig economy” contracts
Two thirds of women gain too much or too little weight in pregnancy: Global study
Livestock manure linked to the rapid spread of hidden antibiotic resistance threats in farmland soils
National Women’s Soccer League launches Hands-Only CPR effort, led by player Savy King
School accountability yields long-term gains for students
Half of novelists believe AI is likely to replace their work entirely, research finds
World's largest metabolomic study completed, paving way for predictive medicine
Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers identify genetic factors influencing bone density in pediatric patients
Trapping particles to explain lightning
Teens who play video games with gambling-like elements more likely to start real betting, study suggests
Maternal health program cuts infection deaths by 32%
Use of head CT scans in ERs more than doubles over 15 years
Open spaces in cities may be hotspots for coyote-human interaction
Focused ultrasound passes first test in treatment of pediatric brain cancer
Beef vs. plant-based meat: UT Austin study finds diet alters breast milk composition in under a week
Two new studies from Schneider Electric and the Boston University Institute for Global Sustainability reveal 95 barriers and 50 risks slowing decarbonization in the building sector
[Press-News.org] SwRI’s new aerospace acoustic testing system can simulate the deafening noise of a rocket launchSpecially designed speakers can reach up to 150 decibels in SwRI’s Space Systems Integration Facility








