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Low-Frequency, Spanwise Oscillation in a Finite-Width Cavity

ORAL

Abstract

A joint experimental–computational program examined low-frequency, spanwise oscillations in supersonic flow over a finite-width cavity. Lowpass-filtered rear wall surface pressure revealed that shear layer impingement was most often biased to one side of the wall, switching sides at a frequency two orders of magnitude below resonance. Therefore, a bifurcation into two spanwise-asymmetric, mirrored, quasi-steady states could be defined. The states were described by biased impingement/ejection near the rear wall, asymmetry of the shear layer, and centrifugal inner-cavity flow. Resonance amplitudes were also found to be spatially modulated by the low-frequency flow switching. A yawed inflow was found to force one of the asymmetric states.

Publication: Physics of Fluids 33, 076102 (2021); https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0053682

Presenters

  • Kenneth Granlund

    North Carolina State University

Authors

  • Aaron M Turpin

    North Carolina State University

  • Rachelle Speth

    Air Force Research Laboratory

  • Scott Sherer

    Air Force Research Laboratory

  • Kenneth Granlund

    North Carolina State University