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Transition Experiments on Large Bluntness Cones with Distributed Roughness in Hypersonic Flight
Author(s) -
Daniel C. Reda,
Michael C. Wilder,
Dinesh Prabhu
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
50th aiaa aerospace sciences meeting including the new horizons forum and aerospace exposition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2012-446
Subject(s) - freestream , mechanics , reynolds number , hypersonic speed , surface finish , mach number , surface roughness , materials science , laminar flow , streamlines, streaklines, and pathlines , boundary layer , hypersonic flight , stagnation temperature , leading edge , optics , stagnation point , physics , heat transfer , composite material , turbulence
Large bluntness cones with smooth nosetips and roughened frusta were flown in the NASA Ames hypersonic ballistic range at a Mach number of 10 through quiescent air environments. Global surface intensity (temperature) distributions were optically measured and analyzed to determine transition onset and progression over the roughened surface. Real-gas Navier-Stokes calculations of model flowfields, including laminar boundary layer development in these flowfields, were conducted to predict values of key dimensionless parameters used to correlate transition on such configurations in hypersonic flow. For these large bluntness cases, predicted axial distributions of the roughness Reynolds number showed (for each specified freestream pressure) that this parameter was a maximum at the physical beginning of the roughened zone and decreased with increasing run length along the roughened surface. Roughness-induced transition occurred downstream of this maximum roughness Reynolds number location, and progressed upstream towards the beginning of the roughened zone as freestream pressure was systematically increased. Roughness elements encountered at the upstream edge of the roughened frusta thus acted like a finite-extent trip array, consistent with published results concerning the tripping effectiveness of roughness bands placed on otherwise smooth surfaces.

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