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Turbulent Statistics from Time-Resolved PIV Measurements of a Jet Using Empirical Mode Decomposition
Author(s) -
Milo D. Dahl
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
nasa sti repository (national aeronautics and space administration)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2012-2297
Subject(s) - turbulence , jet (fluid) , mode (computer interface) , decomposition , hilbert–huang transform , statistical physics , statistics , physics , computational physics , mechanics , computer science , mathematics , white noise , operating system , ecology , biology
Empirical mode decomposition is an adaptive signal processing method that when applied to a broadband signal, such as that generated by turbulence, acts as a set of band-pass filters. This process was applied to data from time-resolved, particle image velocimetry measurements of subsonic jets prior to computing the second-order, two-point, space-time correlations from which turbulent phase velocities and length and time scales could be determined. The application of this method to large sets of simultaneous time histories is new. In this initial study, the results are relevant to acoustic analogy source models for jet noise prediction. The high frequency portion of the results could provide the turbulent values for subgrid scale models for noise that is missed in large-eddy simulations. The results are also used to infer that the cross-correlations between different components of the decomposed signals at two points in space, neglected in this initial study, are important.

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