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Evolution of the shock front and turbulence structures in the shock/turbulence interactionThe interaction of a weak shock front with isotropic turbulence has been investigated using Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS). Two problems were considered: the ability of the field equation (the equation for a propagating surface) to model the shock; and a quantitative study of the evolution of turbulence structure using the database generated by Lee et al. Field equation model predictions for front shape have been compared with DNS results; good agreement is found for shock wave interaction with 2D turbulence and for a single steady vorticity wave. In the interaction of 3D isotropic turbulence with a normal shock, strong alignment of vorticity with the intermediate eigenvector of the rate of strain tensor (S(sup *)(sub ij) = S(sub ij) - (1/3)(delta(sub ij))(S(sub kk))) is seen to develop upstream of the shock and to be further amplified on passage through the shock. Vorticity tends to align at 90 deg to the largest eigenvector, but there is no preferred alignment with the smallest eigenvector. Upstream of the shock, the alignments continue to develop even after the velocity derivative skewness saturates. There is a significant tendency, which increases with time throughout the computational domain, for velocity to align with vorticity. The alignment between velocity and vorticity is strongest in eddy regions and weakest in convergence regions.
Document ID
19940010288
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Kevlahan, N.
(Cambridge Univ. Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Mahesh, K.
(Stanford Univ. CA., United States)
Lee, S.
(Stanford Univ. CA., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
November 1, 1992
Publication Information
Publication: Stanford Univ., Studying Turbulence Using Numerical Simulation Databases. 4: Proceedings of the 1992 Summer Program
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Accession Number
94N14761
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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