6.5 The piston in a baffle

A flat circular disk of radius aa, vibrating along its normal in a rigid infinite plane (the baffle), is the canonical model for a loudspeaker. It is also the cleanest example of a directional acoustic source — one whose radiation pattern depends strongly on the angle to the source axis. The piston-in-baffle problem is in every acoustics textbook and is worth working through in outline because the directivity it exhibits is universal: any source large compared to the wavelength radiates more in some directions than others.

The setup

A rigid circular piston of radius aa vibrates along its normal axis (call it the zz-axis) with uniform surface velocity U0cos(ωt)U_0 \cos(\omega t). The piston sits flush with an infinite rigid plane wall — the baffle — at z=0z = 0. We want the radiated pressure field for z>0z > 0.

The boundary condition is: the normal velocity at z=0z = 0 is U0cos(ωt)U_0 \cos(\omega t) over the piston (ρ<a\rho < a) and zero everywhere else.

The radiation integral

Each point on the piston surface radiates as an infinitesimal monopole with volume velocity U0dAU_0\, dA. Integrating over the piston gives the pressure at any field point. After the (long) algebra, the far-field pressure at angle θ\theta from the axis is

p(r,θ,t)  =  iωρ0U0A2πrD(θ)ei(ωtkr),p(r, \theta, t) \;=\; \frac{i \omega \rho_0\, U_0\, A}{2\pi r}\, D(\theta)\, e^{i(\omega t - k r)},

with A=πa2A = \pi a^2 the piston area and the directivity function

D(θ)  =  2J1(kasinθ)kasinθ,D(\theta) \;=\; \frac{2 J_1(k a \sin\theta)}{k a \sin\theta},

where J1J_1 is the Bessel function of the first kind, order 1. The combination J1(x)/xJ_1(x)/x is normalised to D=1D = 1 at θ=0\theta = 0.

The beam

D(θ)D(\theta) has structure:

The angular width of the main lobe depends on ka=2πa/λk a = 2\pi a / \lambda:

This is Fraunhofer diffraction. The piston’s directional radiation pattern is the Fourier transform of its aperture function. The connection to chapter 8 (Fourier domain) and chapter 7 (diffraction) is not a coincidence.

Crossover with the loudspeaker

For a 30-cm-diameter woofer cone (a=0.15a = 0.15 m), the half-angle of the main lobe is approximately:

This is why a single loudspeaker’s high-frequency response sounds coloured off-axis: the beam pattern aims most of the high-frequency energy along the axis, and off-axis listeners hear a roll-off. Multi-driver speakers use small dome tweeters for high frequencies precisely to broaden the beam at the wavelengths where directionality would otherwise dominate.

Radiation impedance

The piston also has a frequency-dependent radiation impedance (its loading on the surrounding air). For ka1k a \ll 1, the radiation resistance is (ka)2\sim (k a)^2 — small, like a monopole. For ka1k a \gg 1, it asymptotes to ρ0c\rho_0 c — the piston is impedance-matched to the surrounding air and radiates with maximum efficiency.

This is why subwoofers are big: at 50 Hz, λ=7\lambda = 7 m, and a 0.5-m woofer has ka=0.22k a = 0.22, giving radiation resistance 0.05ρ0c\sim 0.05 \cdot \rho_0 c — most of the cone’s motion is reactive, sloshing air without radiating. Larger woofers, or horn-loaded enclosures (which artificially increase the effective aa), recover the lost efficiency.

Looking ahead

We have surveyed isotropic and directional sources. The radiated wave then propagates outward — and may meet boundaries: walls, fluid interfaces, tube ends, slits. The next chapter is about that interaction. Reflection, refraction, diffraction, modes — all the things the wave does when it bumps into something.