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Journal ArticleDOI

The mechanism of transition in the wake of a thin flat plate placed parallel to a uniform flow

Hiroshi Sato, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1961 - 
- Vol. 11, Iss: 03, pp 321-352
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TLDR
In this article, a study was made of the laminar-turbulent transition of a wake behind a thin flat plate which was placed parallel to a uniform flow at subsonic speeds.
Abstract
A study was made of the laminar-turbulent transition of a wake behind a thin flat plate which was placed parallel to a uniform flow at subsonic speeds. Experimental results on the nature of the velocity fluctuations have made it possible to classify the transition region into three subregions: the linear region, the non-linear region and the three-dimensional region.In the linear region there is found a sinusoidal velocity fluctuation which is antisymmetrical with respect to the centre-line of the wake. The frequency of fluctuation is proportional to the power of the free-stream velocity, and the amplitude increases exponentially in the direction of flow. The behaviour of small disturbances in the linear region was investigated in detail by inducing velocity fluctuation with an external excitation—actually sound from a loudspeaker. Solutions of the equation of a small disturbance superposed on the laminar flow were obtained numerically and compared with the experimental results. The agreement between the two was satisfactory.When the amplitude of fluctuation exceeds a certain value, the growth rate deviates from being exponential due to non-linear effects. Although velocity fluctuations in the non-linear region are still sinusoidal and two-dimensional, the experimental results on the distributions of amplitude and phase indicate that the flow pattern may be described by the model of a double row of vortices. This configuration lasts until three-dimensional distortion takes place in the final subregion, the three-dimensional region, in which the fluctuation loses regularity and gradually develops into turbulence without being accompanied by abrupt breakdown or turbulent bursts.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The transition to turbulence in the wake of a circular cylinder

TL;DR: The position of the region of transition to turbulence and the manner in which turbulence develops are investigated using a hot-wire anemometer to study the character of the flow in the wake of a circular cylinder as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The growth and breakdown of streamwise vortices in the presence of a wall

TL;DR: In this paper, the growth and breakdown of counter-rotating streamwise vortices, generated on a concave wall via the Goertler instability mechanism, were experimentally studied as a model for comparable eddy structures that exist in transitional and turbulent flat-plate boundary layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The resonant interaction of disturbances at laminar-turbulent transition in a boundary layer

TL;DR: In this paper, the three-dimensional resonant interaction of a plane Tollmien-Schlichting wave, having a frequency f 1, with a pair of oblique waves having frequencies ½ f 1 was observed and studied experimentally.
Book ChapterDOI

On the Many Faces of Transition

TL;DR: For a given shear-layer geometry the high-Reynolds-numbers turbulent flows possess strong, stable in-the-large, nearly universal features associated with the large number of degrees of freedom in the flows as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The natural and forced formation of spot-like vortex dislocations in the transition of a wake

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that vortex dislocations are stable in a symmetric in-phase configuration, and that they induce quasi-periodic velocity spectra and (beat) dislocation-frequency oscillations in the near wake.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The stability and transition of a two-dimensional jet

TL;DR: In this article, the response characteristics of laminar jets to artificial external excitation were investigated in detail by using sound as an exciting agent, where the frequency of excitation coincides with that of self-excited sinusoidal fluctuations.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Transition from Laminar to Turbulent Flow

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation and development of the vortex loop is found to be the essential feature preceding the creation of a turbulent spot which takes place near the top of a vortex loop and near the outer edge of the boundary layer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability and transition of a supersonic laminar boundary layer on an insulated flat plate

TL;DR: In this article, self-excited oscillations have been discovered experimentally in a supersonic laminar boundary layer along a flat plate and the stability limits determined at free-stream Mach numbers 1·6 and 2·2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental Investigation on the Transition of Laminar Separated Layer

TL;DR: In this paper, a hot-wire anemometer survey of velocity fluctuation revealed the existence of sinusoidal wave, the frequency of which lies in the unstable zone predicted by stability theory.