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Boundary-layer Instability Measurements on a Cone at Freestream Mach 3.5An experimental study was conducted in the NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) Langley Supersonic Low-Disturbance Tunnel to investigate naturally-occurring instabilities in a supersonic boundary layer on a 7◦ half-angle cone at nominal freestream conditions: Mach 3.5, total temperature of 299.8K, and unit Reynolds numbers (millions per m) of 9.89, 13.85, 21.77, and 25.73. Instability measurements were acquired under noisy-flow and quiet-flow conditions. Pitot-pressure and calibrated hot-wire measurements were obtained using a model-integrated traverse system to document the model flow field. In noisy-flow conditions, growth rates and mode shapes achieved good agreement between the measured results and
linear stability theory (LST). The corresponding N factor at transition from LST is N ≈ 3.9. Under quiet-flow conditions, the most unstable first-mode instabilities as predicted by LST were measured, but this mode was not the dominant instability measured in the boundary layer. Instead, the dominant instabilities were less-amplified, low-frequency disturbances predicted by LST, and grew according to linear theory. These low-frequency unstable disturbances were initiated by freestream acoustic disturbances through a receptivity process believed to occur near the branch I location of the cone. Under quiet-flow conditions, the boundary layer remained
laminar up to the last measurement station for the largest unit Reynolds number, implying a transition N factor of N > 8.5.
Document ID
20210018571
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
Rudolph A. King ORCID
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Amanda Chou
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Ponnampalam Balakumar
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Lewis R. Owens
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Michael A. Kegerise
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
July 12, 2021
Publication Date
October 21, 2021
Publication Information
Publication: Physics of Fluids
Publisher: American Institute of Physics / American Physical Society, Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume: 33
Issue: 10
Issue Publication Date: October 1, 2021
ISSN: 1070-6631
e-ISSN: 1089-7666
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Thermodynamics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 725017.02.07.03.01
PROJECT: Commercial Supersonic Technology
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Boundary Layer
Instability
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