4.7 Article

Instability of a tangential discontinuity surface in a three-dimensional compressible medium

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0033753

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [05M14ZAM]

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This article investigates the stability of tangential velocity discontinuity in compressible media, revisiting a case that previously produced inaccurate conclusions and introducing a real finite spatial system. It is shown that the discontinuity surface is stable with a large Mach number and real roots in the dispersion relation equation, and a smaller critical value of the Mach number is needed to stabilize flow in a narrow channel.
Compressible flows appear in many natural and technological processes, for instance, the flow of natural gases in a pipe system. Thus, a detailed study of the stability of tangential velocity discontinuity in compressible media is relevant and necessary. The first early investigation in two-dimensional (2D) media was given more than 70 years ago. In this article, we continue investigating the stability in three-dimensional (3D) media. The idealized statement of this problem in an infinite spatial space was studied by Syrovatskii in 1954. However, the omission of the absolute sign of cos theta with theta being the angle between vectors of velocity and wave number in a certain inequality produced the inaccurate conclusion that the flow is always unstable for entire values of the Mach number M. First, we revisit this case to arrive at the correct conclusion, namely that the discontinuity surface is stabilized for a large Mach number with a given value of the angle theta. Next, we introduce a real finite spatial system such that it is bounded by solid walls along the flow direction. We show that the discontinuity surface is stable if and only if the dispersion relation equation has only real roots, with a large value of the Mach number; otherwise, the surface is always unstable. In particular, we show that a smaller critical value of the Mach number is required to make the flow in a narrow channel stable.

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