Abstract

Numerical analysis of a steady monatomic gas flow about the point of the regular reflection of a strong oblique shock wave from the symmetry plane is conducted with the Navier–Stokes–Fourier (NSF) equations, the regularized Grad 13-moment (R13) equations and the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method. In contrast to the inviscid solution to this problem completely defined by the Rankine–Hugoniot (RH) relations, all three models predict a complicated flow structure with strong thermal non-equilibrium and a long wake with flow parameters not predicted by the RH relations. The temperature $T_y$ related to thermal motion of molecules in the direction normal to the symmetry plane has a maximum inside the reflection zone while in a planar shock wave the maximum is observed for the $T_x$ temperature. The R13 equations predict these features much better than the NSF equations and are in good agreement with the benchmark DSMC results. An analysis of the flow with the conservation equations was conducted in order to evaluate the effects of various processes on a fluid element moving along the symmetry plane. In contrast to the shock wave where effects of viscosity and heat conduction are one-dimensional with zeroth net contribution to the fluid-element energy across the shock, the flow across the zone of the shock reflection is dominated by two-dimensional effects with positive net contribution of viscosity and negative contribution of heat conduction to the fluid-element energy. These effects are believed to be the main source of the wake with parameters deviating from the RH values.

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