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The structure of the turbulent pressure field in boundary-layer flows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2006

G. M. Corcos
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley

Abstract

The paper is discussion of measurements of the statistical properties of the pressure field at the wall of turbulent attached shear flows. These measurements have been made only in part by the author. A preliminary discussion is given of the important limitations imposed by the imperfect space resolution of contemporary pressure transducers. There follows a discussion of the appropriate scales of the pressure field. It is shown that measurements of the longitudinal cross-spectral densities lead to similarity variables for the space-time covariance of the pressure and for the corresponding spectra. The existence of these similarity variables may be due to the dispersion of the sources of pressure by the mean velocity gradient. Such a mechanism is illustrated by a simple model. Lateral cross-spectral densities also lead approximately to similarity variables.

Computations based directly upon detailed pressure-velocity correlation measurements by Wooldridge & Willmarth reveal that an important part of the pressure at the wall of a boundary layer is contributed by source terms which are quadratic in the turbulent velocity fluctuations; the interaction of the mean strain rate with normal velocity fluctuations, being in effect limited to a region very near the wall, supplies a dominant contribution only at high frequencies and its scales, downstream convective speed and convective memory are markedly smaller than those of the observed wall pressure.

The inner part of the Law of the Wall region (y* [les ] 100) seems to be substantially free of pressure sources and within that region (a) the pressure can be given in terms of its boundary value, and (b) the local velocity field is dependent upon but unbale to affect appreciably the turbulent pressures.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1964 Cambridge University Press

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