Abstract

Kinematic aspects of flow separation in external aerodynamics are investigated in the Lagrangian frame. Specifically, the initial motion of upwelling fluid material from the wall is related to the long-term attracting manifolds in the flowfield. Although the short-time kinematics are governed by the formation of a material spike upstream of the zero-skin-friction point and ejection of particles in the direction of the asymptotic separation line, the trajectories of the fluid tracers are guided by attracting ridges in the finite-time Lyapunov exponents once they leave the vicinity of the wall. The wall signature of this initial fluid upwelling event, which is the so-called spiking point (Serra, M., Vetel, J., and Haller, G., “Exact Theory of Material Spike Formation in Flow Separation,” Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 845, June 2018, pp. 51–92), is computed from the curvature of advected material lines and, for the first time, from high-order numerical derivatives of the wall-normal velocity obtained from direct numerical simulations of a circular cylinder and a cambered NACA 65(1)-412 airfoil. As the spline-based boundary parametrization of the airfoil profile induces oscillations, the principle spiking point can be recovered robustly through appropriate filtering. The short-term kinematics correlate strongly with the scaling lengths in the boundary layer.

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