Experiments on the flow past an inclined disk
- 11 August 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 29 (4) , 691-703
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112067001120
Abstract
The wake of a disk at an angle to a stream contains marked periodic motions which arise from the regular shedding of vortices from the trailing edge. The vortices are in the form of a chain of irregular rings, each one linked to the succeeding one, and they move downstream at about 0·6 of free-stream velocity. The prominence of the vortex shedding increases as the angle of incidence (measured from the normal) increases up to at least 50°. The shedding frequency increases with the angle of incidence, but by a suitable choice of reference velocity and length scale, may be described by a wake Strouhal number which has the constant value 0·21 for all angles of incidence above zero, up to at least 40°. Axially-symmetric bodies at zero incidence shed vortices in a similar manner, except that the orientation of the plane of vortex shedding is not fixed and varies from time to time.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Experiments on the low-speed flow past conesJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1967