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Simple cases of the streamline-curvature instability in three-dimensional boundary layers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2006

Nobutake Itoh
Affiliation:
National Aerospace Laboratory, Chofu, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

A new instability of the centrifugal type due to the curvature of external streamlines was theoretically predicted in a recent study on boundary layers along a swept wing. It is, however, not clear how this instability relates to already-known instability phenomena in various three-dimensional flows. So the basic idea developed in the analysis of boundary layers is applied to the simpler problems of the flow on a rotating disk and along the leading edge of a yawed circular cylinder, and the resulting eigenvalue problems are numerically solved to show multiple stability characteristics of the flows. Computational results confirm that the streamline-curvature instability does appear in the rotating-disk flow and that it is in fact identical with the instability called the ‘parallel’ or ‘type 2’ mode in the atmospheric literature. This instability is also found to occur in the steady flow near the attachment line and to give the lowest values of the critical Reynolds number except for a very narrow region close to the attachment line, where the viscous and cross-flow instabilities are dominant. These facts provide evidence to show that the same mode of instability as the classical one observed in rotating flows can appear in general three-dimensional boundary layers without rotation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1996 Cambridge University Press

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