Power law and log law velocity profiles in turbulent boundary-layer flow: Equivalent relations at large Reynolds numbers
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Publication:5956696
DOI10.1007/BF01246918zbMath1107.76329MaRDI QIDQ5956696
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Publication date: 28 February 2002
Published in: Acta Mechanica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Related Items (3)
Universal scaling of mean skin friction in turbulent boundary layers and fully developed pipe and channel flows ⋮ Power law and log law velocity profiles in fully developed turbulent pipe flow: Equivalent relations at large Reynolds numbers ⋮ The mean velocity profile of a smooth-flat-plate turbulent boundary layer at high Reynolds number
Cites Work
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- Analysis of a turbulent boundary layer subjected to a strong adverse pressure gradient
- Scaling laws for turbulent wall-bounded shear flows at very large Reynolds numbers
- Scaling laws for fully developed turbulent flow in pipes: Discussion of experimental data
- The law of the wake in the turbulent boundary layer
- Mean-flow scaling of turbulent pipe flow
- Structure of the zero-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layer
- Scaling laws for fully developed turbulent shear flows. Part 1. Basic hypotheses and analysis
- Fully developed turbulent flow in a pipe: an intermediate layer
- Log laws or power laws: The scaling in the overlap region
- Response to “Scaling of the intermediate region in wall-bounded turbulence: The power law” [Phys. Fluids 10, 1043 (1998)]
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