Podcast: Is Your Car a Good Listener?

Acoustic Simulation Experts Discuss Audio Analysis in Automotive

Acoustic Simulation Experts from COMSOL and Dassault Systemes Simulia Discuss Audio Analysis in Automotive

View or stream online

Audio Podcast
Podcast: Is Your Car a Good Listener?
Duration
9:11 hrs/min/sec
View or Stream

Subscribe via iTunes or Google Podcasts and don't miss a beat.

Subscribe today


Subscribe to our DE247 Podcast Channel and get engineering news and content delivered in real time via Apple iTunes, Google Podcasts and more.


Electric cars are in general much quieter than those that run on combustion engine. The car's fan noise is much softer, compared to a typical combustion engine's gasoline-guzzling growls. 

You might think acoustic engineering is less critical in the quieter electric cars, but experts point out, it's the opposite. When the car is much quieter, the driver and passengers begin to notice other sounds, such as wind noise and window rattling. 

On the other hand, the car cannot be completely silent. It has to produce a required level of sound (required by law in many regions) so pedestrians can hear it approaching and get out of the way, if needed. 

In self-driving cars, in addition to seeing traffic signals and obstacles, the autonomous car must also listen to its surrounding for sounds like emergency vehicle sirens, then take appropriate action. So the car needs to be a good listener, to make up for the driver who may only be partially engaged.

Striking a good balance involves careful placement of microphones and speakers, and modeling the audio environment of the vehicle in simulation software. Here, the car's geometry plays a key role. The shape of the car determines the airflow around it, and consequently the wind noise it generates. It also determines the enclosed space within which sounds propogate. 

The simulation physics get much more complicated as you pile sound propagation on top of the speakers' electromagnetics and wind friction.

In this podcast, part of our latest feature titled “Is Your Car a Good Listener?” (August/September 2020 issue), Ales Alajbegovic, Vice President of World Wide Industry Process, SIMULIA, Dassault Systemes; Siva Senthooran, Director of Technical Sales, SIMULIA, Dassault Systemes; and Mads Jensen, Technical Product Manager for Acoustics, COMSOL, discuss what it takes to teach a car to listen; and how to listen to the car before it's built.

View or Stream

More COMSOL Coverage

COMSOL Company Profile

More Dassault Systemes Coverage

Unified Modeling And Simulation (MODSIM) For Sustainable Product Development
Companies in all sectors must address the need for greater sustainability to meet customer demands. The development of new products necessitates rigorous testing and evaluation, while efforts must be made to decrease emissions and operate in a more economical fashion.
TECHNIA Poised to Expand BIOVIA Customer Base
Virtual twin-focused company buys BIOVIA reseller business from Workflow Informatics Corp.
Online FEA and CFD Classes Becoming the Norm
Virtual classrooms make specialist skills more accessible.
Making and Breaking Things for Fun
Makers and YouTubers blend engineering, entertainment and creativity.
Dassault Systèmes 3DEXPERIENCE Platform Recognized as PACT Conformant
Virtualization is now enabling companies to redefine a decarbonized value chain, Dassault reports.
Dassault Systèmes Signs AI Pact for Europe
Dassault Systèmes aims to play a proactive role in how AI is used for driving innovation in industry, benefiting citizens, patients and consumers.
Dassault Systemes Company Profile

Share This Article

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.


About the Author

Kenneth Wong's avatar
Kenneth Wong

Kenneth Wong is Digital Engineering’s resident blogger and senior editor. Email him at kennethwong@digitaleng.news or share your thoughts on this article at digitaleng.news/facebook.

      Follow DE
#24419