This systematic review summarizes experimental studies in atmospheric acoustics that quantify environmental influences on long-range sound propagation. A keyword-based search was conducted in Scopus and Google Scholar to identify relevant records. Studies were included if they were published in English between January 1977 and April 2026, investigated long-range sound propagation within the human audibility range using specific sound sources, and incorporated concurrent meteorological measurements. Two reviewers worked independently to assess eligibility of the studies included in this review. Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, this systematic review surveys the methodological content of these studies with respect to sound sources, signal content and processing, microphone configuration, treatment of the ground and topography, and meteorological measurements to identify common practices. Some studies provide only limited information about the acoustic source properties, postprocessing of acoustic data, and/or configuration of meteorological measurements. Key experimental details for the 40 included studies are tabulated and summarized via histograms for reference. Most experimental acoustic studies have measured propagation within a range of 2 km on relatively flat land and have utilized tower-based meteorological measurements. The results of the studies surveyed here have implications for understanding long-range outdoor sound propagation, including development of accurate numerical models. Some contributing authors were funded by the Office of Naval Research: ONR Award N00014 24-1-2400, ONR Award N00014-24-1-2437.
Stengrim et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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