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Semidiscrete Galerkin modelling of compressible viscous flow past a circular cone at incidenceA numerical study of the laminar and compressible boundary layer, about a circular cone in a supersonic free stream, is presented. It is thought that if accurate and efficient numerical schemes can be produced to solve the boundary layer equations, they can be joined to numerical codes that solve the inviscid outer flow. The combination of these numerical codes is competitive with the accurate, but computationally expensive, Navier-Stokes schemes. The primary goal is to develop a finite element method for the calculation of 3-D compressible laminar boundary layer about a yawed cone. The proposed method can, in principle, be extended to apply to the 3-D boundary layer of pointed bodies of arbitrary cross section. The 3-D boundary layer equations governing supersonic free stream flow about a cone are examined. The 3-D partial differential equations are reduced to 2-D integral equations by applying the Howarth, Mangler, Crocco transformations, a linear relation between viscosity, and a Blasius-type of similarity variable. This is equivalent to a Dorodnitsyn-type formulation. The reduced equations are independent of density and curvature effects, and resemble the weak form of the 2-D incompressible boundary layer equations in Cartesian coordinates. In addition the coordinate normal to the wall has been stretched, which reduces the gradients across the layer and provides high resolution near the surface. Utilizing the parabolic nature of the boundary layer equations, a finite element method is applied to the Dorodnitsyn formulation. The formulation is presented in a Petrov-Galerkin finite element form and discretized across the layer using linear interpolation functions. The finite element discretization yields a system of ordinary differential equations in the circumferential direction. The circumferential derivatives are solved by an implicit and noniterative finite difference marching scheme. Solutions are presented for a 15 deg half angle cone at angles of attack of 5 and 10 deg. The numerical solutions assume a laminar boundary layer with free stream Mach number of 7. Results include circumferential distribution of skin friction and surface heat transfer, and cross flow velocity distributions across the layer.
Document ID
19900009348
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Thesis/Dissertation
Authors
Meade, Andrew James, Jr.
(California Univ. Berkeley, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
October 30, 1989
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-186323
NAS 1.26:186323
Report Number: NASA-CR-186323
Report Number: NAS 1.26:186323
Accession Number
90N18664
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG2-483
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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