Authors
R Narasimha, KR Sreenivasan
Publication date
1979/1/1
Source
Advances in applied mechanics
Volume
19
Pages
221-309
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Publisher Summary
This chapter examines the mechanisms that cause reversion and discusses if there are any similarities or general principles that govern them. In carrying out this examination, a pragmatic definition of reversion is adopted, according to which a flow has relaminarized if its development is understood without recourse to any model for turbulent shear flow. This implies that the turbulent fluctuations need not necessarily have completely vanished in the relaminarized state; but that, if present, their contribution to mean flow dynamics is negligible. Under these circumstances, the flow may be called quasi-laminar; it carries a residual turbulence that is inherited from the previous history of the flow but has been rendered passive. The chapter discusses three reverting flows. In the first, turbulent energy is dissipated through the action of a molecular transport property, such as the viscosity or conductivity, and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Narasimha, KR Sreenivasan - Advances in applied mechanics, 1979