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    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Regardless of our understanding of the complicated physical process, means can always be found to alter the occurrence and development of unsteady separation. To be able to optimize the control of separation, however, requires the identification of the critical aspects to which the intervention may be focused and achieve the desired result with minimum waste of effort. The Lagrangian analysis of unsteady boundary-layer traces the trajectories of individual fluid particles and reveals the 'bad seeds' that, through extreme deformation in the direction normal to the wall, eventually develop into a virtual barrier and cause the ejection of boundary-layer material into the main stream. It follows logically that separation can be triggered or delayed most effectively by targeting these 'bad seeds.' Since they are normally interior points of the boundary layer, attempts to influence them through the boundary conditions are necessarily indirect. Furthermore, as the strategy has to be the modification of the growing process of the 'bad seeds,' whatever may be the intervention scheme, it needs to be strong enough and early enough. In Shen and Wu, examples of how acceleration/deceleration of the two dimensional body, as well as the moving wall of a rotating cylinder, may affect the development of the bad seed toward separation are shown. In fact it was mentioned therein that the results might be the first step for a feasibility study of the control of unsteady separation. Presented are additional results of applying suction to an impulsively started circular cylinder.
    Keywords: FLUID MECHANICS AND HEAT TRANSFER
    Type: NASA. Ames Research Center, Physics of Forced Unsteady Separation; p 269-276
    Format: application/pdf
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