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Laminar Superlayer at the Turbulence Boundary
144
Citations
19
References
2011
Year
AeroacousticsEngineeringPhysicsAerospace EngineeringFluid MechanicsLaminar SuperlayerTurbulence ModelingTurbulenceNumerical SimulationAerodynamicsTransport PhenomenaVortex DynamicTurbulence SpreadingLocal Superlayer VelocityMultiphase FlowBoundary LayerHydrodynamic Stability
In this Letter we present results from particle tracking velocimetry and direct numerical simulation that are congruent with the existence of a laminar superlayer, as proposed in the pioneering work of Corrsin and Kistler (NACA, Technical Report No. 1244, 1955). We find that the local superlayer velocity is dominated by a viscous component and its magnitude is comparable to the characteristic velocity of the smallest scales of motion. This slow viscous process involves a large surface area so that the global rate of turbulence spreading is set by the largest scales of motion. These findings are important for a better understanding of mixing of mass and momentum in a variety of flows where thin layers of shear exist. Examples are boundary layers, clouds, planetary atmospheres, and oceans.
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