Abstract
Mode interaction is studied via direct numerical simulations of a Mach 4.5 boundary layer with discrete and continuous modes imposed at the inflow. An approximate decoupling procedure is developed to create separate vortical, acoustic and entropic continuous mode components. Oblique horizontal vorticity modes induce boundary layer disturbances that grow with downstream distance, similarly to their incompressible counterpart. One salient difference is that a low frequency vorticity mode, alone, is found to induce transition by spawning two-dimensional, unstable discrete modes. The discrete modes are non-linearly excited at high harmonics of the inlet perturbation. Adding a Mack second mode, in addition to the vorticity mode, causes even earlier transition, suggesting that, in supersonic flow, unstable discrete modes play a crucial role in breakdown of boundary-layer streaks.
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