Abstract

It has been suggested that a turbulent spot is formed when a transient separation occurs in the laminar boundary layer and this criterion has been successfully used by Johnson and Ercan [1996,1997] to predict bypass transition for boundary layers subjected to a wide range of freestream turbulence levels and streamwise pressure gradients. In the current paper experimental results are presented which support the premise that the formation of turbulent spots is associated with transient separation. Near wall hot wire signals in laminar and transitional boundary layers are analysed statistically to produce probability distributions for signal level and trough frequency. In the laminar period the signal level is normally distributed, but during the inter-turbulent periods in the transitional boundary layer the distribution is truncated at the tower end, i.e. the lowest velocity periods in the signal disappear, suggesting that these are replaced during transition by the turbulent periods. The number of these events (troughs) also correlates with the number of turbulent spots during early transition. A linear perturbation theory is also used in the paper to compute the streamlines through a turbulent spot and its associated calmed region. The results indicate that a hairpin vortex dominates the flow and entrains a low momentum fluid stream from upstream with a high momentum stream from downstream and then ejects the combined stream into the turbulent spot. The hairpin can only exist if a local separation occurs beneath its nose and the current results suggest that this separation is induced when the instantaneous velocity in the near wall signal drops below 50% of the mean.

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