Self-sustained localized structures in a boundary-layer flow

Duguet Y, Schlatter P, Henningson DS, Eckhardt B (2012)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2012

Journal

Book Volume: 108

Article Number: 044501

Journal Issue: 4

DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.044501

Abstract

When a boundary layer starts to develop spatially over a flat plate, only disturbances of sufficiently large amplitude survive and trigger turbulence subcritically. Direct numerical simulation of the Blasius boundary-layer flow is carried out to track the dynamics in the region of phase space separating transitional from relaminarizing trajectories. In this intermediate regime, the corresponding disturbance is fully localized and spreads slowly in space. This structure is dominated by a robust pair of low-speed streaks, whose convective instabilities spawn hairpin vortices evolving downstream into transient disturbances. A quasicyclic mechanism for the generation of offspring is unfolded using dynamical rescaling with the local boundary-layer thickness. © 2012 American Physical Society.

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APA:

Duguet, Y., Schlatter, P., Henningson, D.S., & Eckhardt, B. (2012). Self-sustained localized structures in a boundary-layer flow. Physical Review Letters, 108(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.044501

MLA:

Duguet, Yohann, et al. "Self-sustained localized structures in a boundary-layer flow." Physical Review Letters 108.4 (2012).

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