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Hypersonic shock/boundary-layer interaction database
146
Citations
0
References
1991
Year
AeroacousticsEngineeringFluid MechanicsTurbulenceNavier-stokes EquationsComputational MechanicsUnsteady FlowCompressible FlowNumerical SimulationSystems EngineeringModeling And SimulationHypersonic FlowShock CompressionComputational Fluid DynamicsMultiphase FlowSupersonic CombustionAerospace EngineeringTurbulence ModelingAerodynamicsUnderwater Explosion
Turbulence modeling is generally recognized as the major problem obstructing further advances in computational fluid dynamics (CFD). A closed solution of the governing Navier-Stokes equations for turbulent flows of practical consequence is still far beyond grasp. At the same time, the simplified models of turbulence which are used to achieve closure of the Navier-Stokes equations are known to be rigorously incorrect. While these models serve a definite purpose, they are inadequate for the general prediction of hypersonic viscous/inviscid interactions, mixing problems, chemical nonequilibria, and a range of other phenomena which must be predicted in order to design a hypersonic vehicle computationally. Due to the complexity of turbulence, useful new turbulence models are synthesized only when great expertise is brought to bear and considerable intellectual energy is expended. Although this process is fundamentally theoretical, crucial guidance may be gained from carefully-executed basic experiments. Following the birth of a new model, its testing and validation once again demand comparisons with data of unimpeachable quality. This report concerns these issues which arise from the experimental aspects of hypersonic modeling and represents the results of the first phase of an effort to develop compressible turbulence models.