Wartono
Check out "Noise and Vibration Control" by Beranek; Published by McGraw-Hill.
Chapter 16 deals with the noise of gas flows and gives several graphs which can be used to deduce the total noise of the discharge as well as the shape of the frequency distribution. The whole chapter deals with this subject which is a combined function of mass flows, velocity, pressure drop and diameter so you should read the book.
As a very rough guide,
you first calculate the overall dB level of the noise based on mechanical stream power and the mechano/acoustic efficiency (from the curves)
Then, most noise is generated in a peak frequency which is a function of the velocity, diameter and Strouhal number which, in turn, depends on the pressure ratio Pr of the choked opening (upstream absolute pressure / downstream absolute pressure)
When you find the peak frequency, the spectrum shape is related to the total dB level and the peak frequency by another curve which gives you the output in the various frequency ranges, which you need to know in order to make an A scale compensation.
There are a number of other factors like directionality and distance which I am ignoring for this discussion but which will also have a bearing on your final result.
I suggest an afternoon in the engineering library.
![[smile] [smile] [smile]](/data/assets/smilies/smile.gif)
David