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Observations of Traveling Crossflow Resonant Triad Interactions on a Swept Wing
Author(s) -
Jenna L. Eppink,
Richard W. Wlezien
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
42nd aiaa fluid dynamics conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2012-2820
Subject(s) - triad (sociology) , wing , aerospace engineering , swept wing , physics , marine engineering , geology , acoustics , engineering , sociology , social science
†Experimental evidence indicates the presence of a triad resonance interaction between traveling crossflow modes in a swept wing flow. Results indicate that this interaction occurs when the stationary and traveling crossflow modes have similar and relatively low amplitudes (~1% to 6% of the total freestream velocity). The resonant interaction occurs at instability amplitudes well below those typically known to cause transition, yet transition is observed to occur just downstream of the resonance. In each case, two primary linearly unstable traveling crossflow modes are nonlinearly coupled to a higher frequency linearly stable mode at the sum of their frequencies. The higher-frequency mode is linearly stable and presumed to exist as a consequence of the interaction of the two primary modes. Autoand cross-bicoherence are used to determine the extent of phase-matching between the modes, and wavenumber matching confirms the triad resonant nature of the interaction. The bicoherence results indicate a spectral broadening mechanism and the potential path to early transition. The implications for laminar flow control in swept wing flows are significant. Even if stationary crossflow modes remain subcritical, traveling crossflow interactions can lead to early transition.

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