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Dynamic measurement of temperature, velocity, and density in hot jets using Rayleigh scattering
Author(s) -
Amy F. Mielke,
Kristie Elam
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
experiments in fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.01
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1432-1114
pISSN - 0723-4864
DOI - 10.1007/s00348-009-0708-4
Subject(s) - optics , physics , rayleigh scattering , particle image velocimetry , jet (fluid) , computational physics , materials science , mechanics , turbulence
A molecular Rayleigh scattering technique is utilized to measure gas temperature, velocity, and density in unseeded gas flows at sampling rates up to 10 kHz, providing fluctuation information up to 5 kHz based on the Nyquist theorem. A high-power continuous-wave laser beam is focused at a point in an air flow field and Rayleigh scattered light is collected and fiber-optically transmitted to a Fabry–Perot interferometer for spectral analysis. Photomultiplier tubes operated in the photon counting mode allow high-frequency sampling of the total signal level and the circular interference pattern to provide dynamic density, temperature, and velocity measurements. Mean and root mean square velocity, temperature, and density, as well as power spectral density calculations, are presented for measurements in a hydrogen-combustor heated jet facility with a 50.8-mm diameter nozzle at NASA John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field. The Rayleigh measurements are compared with particle image velocimetry data and computational fluid dynamics predictions. This technique is aimed at aeronautics research related to identifying noise sources in free jets, as well as applications in supersonic and hypersonic flows where measurement of flow properties, including mass flux, is required in the presence of shocks and ionization occurrence.

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