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Preparatory Notes for ASNT NDT Level III Examination - Ultrasonic Testing, UT

Preparatory Notes for ASNT NDT Level III Examination - Ultrasonic Testing

Preparatory Notes for ASNT NDT Level III Examination - Ultrasonic Testing

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When sound travels through a medium, its intensity diminishes with distance.<br />

In idealized materials, sound pressure (signal amplitude) is only reduced by<br />

the (1) spreading of the wave. Natural materials, however, all produce an<br />

effect which further weakens the sound. This further weakening results from<br />

(2) scattering and (3) absorption. Scattering is the reflection of the sound in<br />

directions other than its original direction of propagation. Absorption is the<br />

conversion of the sound energy to other <strong>for</strong>ms of energy. The combined<br />

effect of scattering and absorption (spreading?) is called attenuation.<br />

<strong>Ultrasonic</strong> attenuation is the decay rate of the wave as it propagates through<br />

material.<br />

Attenuation of sound within a material itself is often not of intrinsic interest.<br />

However, natural properties and loading conditions can be related to<br />

attenuation. Attenuation often serves as a measurement tool that leads to the<br />

<strong>for</strong>mation of theories to explain physical or chemical phenomenon that<br />

decreases the ultrasonic intensity.

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