This paper provides comparisons between experimental data and numerical results
for impulsively started flows in a three-dimensional rectangular lid-driven cavity of
aspect ratio 1:1:2 at Reynolds number 1000. The initial evolution of this flow is
studied up to the dimensionless time t = 12 and is found both experimentally and
numerically to exhibit high sensitivity to geometrical perturbations. Three different
flow developments generated by very small changes in the boundary geometry are
found in the experiments and are reproduced by the numerics. This indicates that even
at moderate Reynolds numbers the predictability of three-dimensional incompressible
viscous flows in bounded regions requires controlling the shape of the boundary and
the values of the boundary conditions more carefully than needed in two dimensions.
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