Publication | Closed Access
The need for a pressure-term representation in empirical Galerkin models of incompressible shear flows
365
Citations
34
References
2005
Year
Numerical AnalysisEngineeringFluid MechanicsTurbulenceNavier-stokes EquationsEmpirical Galerkin ModelsComputational MechanicsBoundary LayerIncompressible Shear FlowsCompressible FlowNumerical SimulationPressure TermGalerkin ModelHydrodynamic StabilityAccurate Galerkin ModelIncompressible FlowPressure-term RepresentationMultiphase FlowNumerical Method For Partial Differential EquationSubgrid ModelsHydrodynamicsTurbulence ModelingMultiscale Hydrodynamics
Low-dimensional empirical Galerkin models are developed for spatially evolving laminar and transitional shear layers, based on a Karhunen–Loève decomposition of incompressible two- and three-dimensional Navier–Stokes simulations. It is shown that the key to an accurate Galerkin model is a novel analytical pressure-term representation. The effect of the pressure term is elucidated by a modal energy-flow analysis in a mixing layer, which generalizes the framework developed by Rempfer (1991). In convectively unstable shear layers, it is shown in particular that neglecting small energy terms leads to large amplitude errors in the Galerkin model. The effect of the pressure term and small neglected energy flows is very important for a two-dimensional mixing layer, is less pronounced for the three-dimensional analogue, and can be considered as small in an absolutely unstable wake flow.
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