Structure and evolution of the airflow generated by a slender body entry near a tube

Abstract When a slender body moving forward in open air enters into a confined region, two important unsteady aerodynamic phenomena are generated. An exiting flow is created with a direction opposite to the body movement and inside the confined region, a compression wave is formed. Generation mechanism of compression wave have been extensively studied but so far, no detailed investigation of the exiting flow has ever been reported. The experimental study presented in this paper was undertaken to gain insight into the structure and the evolution of the exit-flow. Experiments were conducted with an axisymmetric apparatus and the explored range of the moving body speed was 5–50 m/s. The study focused on the influence of the body speed and the body nose geometry on the flow. It was shown that the air ejected from the tube entrance generates an annulus jet accompanied by a vortex ring. The vortex development was clarified using laser sheet visualizations associated with unsteady pressure and velocity measurements at the tube entrance. It is constituted by four phases, the pre-vortex phase , the vortex development phase , the vortex convection phase and the vortex breakdown phase . The duration of each of these steps was found to be independent of both the studied parameters in a non-dimensional time scale. Furthermore, neither the body speed nor the nose geometry induced significant changes on the vortex ring evolution, except for extreme conditions (low body speed, V M.B. L nose / D M.B. >6). The evolution of the vortex ring was compared to that of ‘classical’ vortex ring generated at a tube exit by a piston motion with large non-dimensional stroke length. Main similarities and differences were discussed in the paper. In particular, the formation number of vortex ring observed in our experiments was found to be significantly smaller.

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