Abstract

The development of a quantitative understanding of large-scale coherent structures in shear flows has led to the recognition of their evolutionary features and 'rules' of nonlinear interaction among each other. These determinations, in conjunction with the study of fine-grained turbulence and mean motion, constitute a general view of hydrodynamical instabilities that has resulted in useful concepts for the achievement of shear-flow control. The dynamical role of longitudinal structures in free shear flows is presently exemplified by the axisymmetric and helical modes in a round jet, which resemble the two-dimensional and spanwise-periodic three-dimensional modes in a two-dimensional mean flow.

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