Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 1999
An investigation of the local receptivity of a Blasius boundary layer to a harmonic vortical disturbance is presented as a step towards understanding boundary-layer receptivity to free-stream turbulence. Although there has been solid experimental verification of the linear theory describing acoustic receptivity of boundary layers, this was the first experimental verification of the mechanism behind local receptivity to a convected disturbance. The harmonic wake from a vibrating ribbon positioned upstream of a flat plate provided the free-stream disturbance. Two-dimensional roughness elements on the surface of the plate acted as a local receptivity site. Hot-wire measurements in the boundary layer downstream of the roughness confirmed the generation of Tollmien–Schlichting (TS) instability waves by an outer-layer interaction between the long-wavelength convected disturbance and the short-scale mean-flow distortion due to the roughness. The characteristics of the instability waves were carefully measured to ensure that their behaviour was correctly modelled by linear stability theory. This theory was then used to determine the immeasurably small initial wave amplitudes resulting from the receptivity process, from wave amplitudes measured downstream. Tests were performed to determine the range of validity of the linear assumptions made in current receptivity theories. Experimental data obtained in the linear regime were then compared to theoretical results of other authors by expressing the experimental data in the form of an efficiency function which is independent of the free-stream amplitude, roughness height and roughness geometry. Reasonable agreement between the experimental and theoretical efficiency functions was obtained over a range of frequencies and Reynolds numbers.