The wave system attached to a slender body in a supersonic relaxing gas stream. Basic results: the cone
- 20 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 79 (3) , 499-524
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112077000299
Abstract
The results of the linear theory for the flow of a supersonic relaxing gas past a slender body of revolution are analysed in regions where its predictions of wavelet position begin to break down. In this way new variable systems can be found which make it possible to discuss the correct nonlinear wave behaviour far from the body. The situation depends upon three especially important parameters, namely the thickness ratio ε of the body, the ratio δ of relaxing-mode energy to thermal energy and the ratio λ of a relaxation length to a typical body length. After establishing general results from the linear theory, the conical body is treated in some detail. This makes it possible to demote λ as an important parameter, although its restoration does prove useful at one point in the analysis, and results are derived for shock-wave behaviour when ord 1 [ges ] δ > ord ε4, δ = ord ε4and δ < ord ε4. In the first range of δ fully dispersed waves are essential, although they are fully established only at great distances from the cone; in the second range of δ partly dispersed waves seem to be the most likely to appear, and in the third range relaxation effects are second-order modifications of a basically frozen-flow field. Practical situations may well fall into the first of these categories.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Similarity solution of the axisymmetric Burgers equationPhysics of Fluids, 1976
- Nonlinear effects in steady supersonic dissipative gasdynamics. Part 2. Three-dimensional axisymmetric flowJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1973
- On the decay of weak shock waves in axisymmetric non-equilibrium flowJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1971
- Real-gas effects in very weak shock waves in the atmosphere and the structure of sonic bangsJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1971
- Non-linear wave propagation in a relaxing gasJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1969
- Non-linear wave propagation in a relaxing gasJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1969
- The Message of JamesScottish Journal of Theology, 1965
- Relaxation effects on the flow over slender bodiesJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1961
- The linearized flow of a dissociating gasJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1960
- The flow pattern of a supersonic projectileCommunications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 1952