Abstract

Experiments on fully developed turbulent flow in a channel which is rotating at a steady rate about a spanwise axis are described. The Coriolis force components in the region of two-dimensional mean flow affect both local and global stability. Three stability-related phenomena were observed or inferred: (i) the reduction (increase) of the rate of wall-layer streak bursting in locally stabilized (destabilized) wall layers; (ii) the total suppression of transition to turbulence in a stabilized layer; (iii) the development of large-scale roll cells on the de-stabilized side of the channel by growth of a Taylor-Gortler vortex instability.An appropriate local stability parameter is the Richardson number formulated by Bradshaw (1969) for this case and the analogous cases of flow over curved walls and of shear-layer flow with density stratification. Local effects of rotational stabilization, such as reduction of the turbulent stress in wall layers, can be related to the local Richardson number in a simple way. This paper not only investigates this effect, but also, by methods of flow visualization, exposes some of the underlying structure changes caused by rotation.

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