What is Acoustical Engineering?
- Acoustical engineering is the branch of engineering dealing with sound and vibration.
- It is the research of sound and vibration, in technology.
- Acoustical engineers research the design, analysis and control of sound.
History of Acoustics at Catholic University
The Early Days
Scientific study of acoustic began at Catholic University as far back as the early 1930s with a few physics faculty members named J. C. Hubbard, George Rock and A. L. Qrirk and a graduate student, that was also a Catholic priest, named Father France Fox. Their research into absorption of sound probably caught the attention of a pair of faculty member at Johns Hopkins University who moved to CUA. The first was Karl Herzfeld, who can in 1937 to be the chair of the Physics Department and the second was Francis Rice who became the chair of Chemistry. While at Hopkins, they authored the first paper that postulated that chemical relaxation was an important mechanism in the absorption of sound. This topic, acoustic dissipation, was the main area of acoustics research through to the 1960s. A culmination of this work is the seminal 1959 book, “Absorption and dispersion of Ultrasonic Waves” by Herzfeld and Ted Litovitz.
After World War II
In about 1965 Frank Andrews came the School of Engineering as the director of the new program in acoustics. Andrews was a Captain in the US Navy and conducted, along with sailors under his command, research related to implementation of sonar system. One of these sailors wrote the letter below describing his time with Andrews.
List of Research Project
- Modeling of atmospheric propagation
- Oscillator arrays
- Acoustics of sound absorbing materials
- Underwater soundscapes
Fulltime Faculty
- Joseph Vignola
- John Judge
- Diego Turo
Adjuncts / Instructors
- Shane Guan
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Classes Offered
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