Abstract

The skin friction of the wall of a wind tunnel has been measured at a Mach number of 2.5 using the surface-tube technique. The Reynolds number (with the distance from the throat as the representative length) was of the order of 2 to 3 millions and the boundary layer was turbulent. The skin friction coefficient was much less than for a very small Mach number (the incompressible case) and the amount of the decrease agreed with calculation. The effect of a shock-wave of strength 2 was also investigated—the strength of a shock-wave is defined as the pressure rise through it divided by the static pressure in front of it. The shock-wave only affected the boundary layer for a few thicknesses upstream of its point of impingement even though it was strong enough to cause local separation. The results show: ( а ) That the surface, or Stanton, tube is a reliable means of measuring skin friction in spite of the large values (over a million with the second as the unit of time) of the velocity gradient at the wall, and that the skin friction coefficient does decrease with Mach number in the manner predicted by calculation. ( b ) That disturbances due to a shock-wave impinging on a turbulent boundary layer are only propagated upstream a few multiples of the boundary layer thicknesses even when the shock-wave is strong enough to cause local separation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call