Stabilization of a swept-wing boundary layer by distributed roughness elements
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Publication:5406602
DOI10.1017/jfm.2013.33zbMath1284.76105OpenAlexW2105998280WikidataQ57856934 ScholiaQ57856934MaRDI QIDQ5406602
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Publication date: 1 April 2014
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2013.33
Boundary-layer theory, separation and reattachment, higher-order effects (76D10) Finite element methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M10) Flow control and optimization for incompressible viscous fluids (76D55) Transition to turbulence (76F06)
Related Items (8)
Effects of distributed roughness on crossflow instability through generalized resonance mechanisms ⋮ Control of a swept-wing boundary layer using ring-type plasma actuators ⋮ Stationary crossflow vortices near the leading edge of three-dimensional boundary layers: the role of non-parallelism and excitation by surface roughness ⋮ Control of crossflow-vortex-induced transition by unsteady control vortices ⋮ Mechanisms of flow tripping by discrete roughness elements in a swept-wing boundary layer ⋮ Conditioning of cross-flow instability modes using dielectric barrier discharge plasma actuators ⋮ Transition to turbulence in the rotating-disk boundary-layer flow with stationary vortices ⋮ Transition in an infinite swept-wing boundary layer subject to surface roughness and free-stream turbulence
Cites Work
- A spectral element method for fluid dynamics: Laminar flow in a channel expansion
- Swept wing boundary-layer receptivity to localized surface roughness
- Receptivity mechanisms in three-dimensional boundary-layer flows
- Secondary instability of cross-flow vortices in Falkner–Skan–Cooke boundary layers
- Transition mechanisms induced by travelling crossflow vortices in a three-dimensional boundary layer
- S<scp>TABILITY AND</scp> T<scp>RANSITION OF</scp> T<scp>HREE</scp>-D<scp>IMENSIONAL</scp> B<scp>OUNDARY</scp> L<scp>AYERS</scp>
- Secondary instability of crossflow vortices
- Secondary instability of crossflow vortices and swept-wing boundary-layer transition
- Fast parallel direct solvers for coarse grid problems
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