Abstract

An experiment investigating the second-mode instability on the sharp cone with a small angle of attack has been conducted. The fine structure in the boundary layer has been visualized by the Nano-tracer-based Planar Laser Scattering(NPLS) technique. The “rope-like” second-mode waves are found to still be the dominant structures before the transition of the boundary layer at 1° angle of attack and the leeside-forward and windside-aft of the transition have also been verified. The propagation velocity of the second-mode waves on the leeward side increases obviously as the disturbance evolving downstream. The development of the disturbance has been analyzed through the wall-fluctuation pressure. The amplification of amplitude is nonmonotonic along the circumferential direction and the M-factor patterns indicated that the disturbance development is delayed in three indentation regions: 55°⩽φ⩽65°,85°⩽φ⩽95° and 130°⩽φ⩽140°.

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