Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2006
The pulsed-wire anemometer has enabled velocity measurements to be made in a variety of unsteady turbulent flows. So far the use of the instrument has been confined to the determination of mean velocity, turbulence intensity and probability density. Here we show how spectral information can also be obtained. The instrument provides estimates of the velocity by measuring the time of flight of a heated flow tracer. Periodic samples of velocity can be generated by driving the anemometer with a regular train of pulses, but unfortunately it is not possible to pulse the heater at a rate greater than about 50 or so times per second, without risk of burning out the wire. This limits the spectral information that can be obtained to situations where all the energy occurs at frequencies below 25 Hz. The random sampling scheme used here avoids the aliasing problem inherent in periodic sampling and enables estimates of power spectral density to be formed up to frequencies many times the average sampling rate. This technique is used to obtain spectral estimates of the velocity fluctuations that arise at various locations in the wake of a flat plate.