Appadu, A. Rao2012-06-062012-06-062012Appadu, AR 2012, 'The technique of MIEELDLD in computational aeroacoustics', Journal of Applied Mathematics, vol. 2012, no. ID 783101, pp. 1-30.1687-0042 (online)1110-757X (print)10.1155/2012/783101http://hdl.handle.net/2263/19128The numerical simulation of aeroacoustic phenomena requires high-order accurate numerical schemes with low dispersion and low dissipation errors. A technique has recently been devised in a Computational Fluid Dynamics framework which enables optimal parameters to be chosen so as to better control the grade and balance of dispersion and dissipation in numerical schemes (Appadu and Dauhoo, 2011; Appadu, 2012a; Appadu, 2012b; Appadu, 2012c). This technique has been baptised as the Minimized Integrated Exponential Error for Low Dispersion and Low Dissipation (MIEELDLD) and has successfully been applied to numerical schemes discretising the 1-D, 2-D, and 3-D advection equations. In this paper, we extend the technique of MIEELDLD to the field of computational aeroacoustics and have been able to construct high-order methodswith Low Dispersion and Low Dissipation properties which approximate the 1-D linear advection equation. Modifications to the spatial discretization schemes designed by Tam and Webb (1993), Lockard et al. (1995), Zingg et al. (1996), Zhuang and Chen (2002), and Bogey and Bailly (2004) have been obtained, and also a modification to the temporal scheme developed by Tam et al. (1993) has been obtained. These novel methods obtained using MIEELDLD have in general better dispersive properties as compared to the existing optimised methods.enCopyright © 2012 A. R. Appadu. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Computational aeroacousticsMiinimized Integrated Exponential Error for Low Dispersion and Low Dissipation (MIEELDLD)Numerical simulationAeroacoustics -- Computer simulationThe technique of MIEELDLD in computational aeroacousticsArticle