Berkeley Fluids Seminar

University of California, Berkeley

Bring your lunch and enjoy learning about fluids!

February 3, 2015

Prof Patrick Huerre (Hydrodynamics Laboratory, Ecole Polytechnique)


Instabilities in Shear Flows: Local versus Global Analyses


The dynamics of vortical structures in shear flows such as jets, wakes, boundary layers is traditionally described by resorting to local hydrodynamic instability analyses, whereby the basic undisturbed flow is assumed to be slowly developing in the stream-wise direction. In such a framework, local parallel flow concepts have been quite successful in accounting for the “amplifier” or “oscillator” behavior of various classes of shear flows and in predicting the global frequency of flows that behave as “oscillators”. More recently, powerful numerical algorithms have been developed, which allow for the full determination of the global frequency spectrum of complex flows, without invoking the slowly-varying assumption. The relative merits of the local and global approaches will be discussed and assessed for several prototypical flows: wakes, isothermal or hot jets, swirling jets undergoing vortex breakdown and swept wing boundary layers.




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Acknowledgments

Prof. Graham Fleming (Vice Chancellor for Research, UC Berkeley)

Prof. Eliot Quataert on behalf of The Theoretical Astrophysics Center and the Astronomy Department (UC Berkeley)

Prof. Philip S. Marcus on behalf of the Mechanical Engineering Department (UC Berkeley)

Prof. Michael Manga (Earth and Planetary Science, UC Berkeley)

Prof. Evan Variano (Civil and Environmental Engineering, UC Berkeley)


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