11th Aerospace Sciences Meeting 1973
DOI: 10.2514/6.1973-107
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Aircraft wake dissipation by sinusoidal instability and vortex breakdown

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Cited by 37 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Naughton et al [59] examined compressibility effects on the swirl induced growth of a jet, and found no significant influence, supporting the validity of the low-mach number assumption. Theoretical studies on VB were attempted to find simple descriptions of the causes and mechanisms based on inviscid model vortices [48] or wave theory [8,9,47,70,81]; and hydrodynamic instability theory on VB [50,52,53] was developed to find criteria for instability.…”
Section: Studies Of Vortex Breakdownmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Naughton et al [59] examined compressibility effects on the swirl induced growth of a jet, and found no significant influence, supporting the validity of the low-mach number assumption. Theoretical studies on VB were attempted to find simple descriptions of the causes and mechanisms based on inviscid model vortices [48] or wave theory [8,9,47,70,81]; and hydrodynamic instability theory on VB [50,52,53] was developed to find criteria for instability.…”
Section: Studies Of Vortex Breakdownmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These disturbances would be wrapped up into the vortex and create variations along its axis. This has been done experimentally 32 and during flight 33 to excite the Crow instability between trailing vortices. The current simulations, however, are applicable to instabilities that occur between a trailing vortex and the secondary vortex that is created as the trailing vortex interacts with the ground.…”
Section: B Initial and Boundary Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latter method actively forces the breakup of vortices, for example, by pitching the vehicle (Chevalier, 1973) or differentially and time-dependently deflecting inboard and outboard control surfaces ("sloshing" of the lift distribution; Crow,1971, Crow and Bate, 1976; Haverkamp et al, 2005). This method was tested in a towing tank (Bilanin and Widnall, 1973), where measured amplification rates agreed qualitatively with theoretical predictions. Recently, a similar approach was pursued with a view to exploiting the multiple vortex growth mechanisms created by an airplane on approach with flaps-down (Crouch el al, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%