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Featured researches published by Jon Baltzer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Osborne Reynolds pipe flow: Direct simulation from laminar through gradual transition to fully developed turbulence

Xiaohua Wu; Parviz Moin; Ronald J. Adrian; Jon Baltzer

Significance The precise dynamics of disturbance energy growth and breakdown in pipe transition is a century-old unresolved problem in fluid mechanics. In this paper, we demonstrate that the mystery attributed to the breakdown process of the Osborne Reynolds pipe transition can be partially resolved with a direct, spatially evolving simulation that carries weakly but finitely perturbed laminar inflow through gradual rather than abrupt transition arriving at the fully developed turbulent state. Some of the previously attributed abruptness and mysteriousness was perhaps due to the inability to study the process accurately with very fine spatial and temporal resolution. The energy norm was found to grow exponentially rather than algebraically. The sensitivity of the transition process to pipe entrance conditions is demonstrated. The precise dynamics of breakdown in pipe transition is a century-old unresolved problem in fluid mechanics. We demonstrate that the abruptness and mysteriousness attributed to the Osborne Reynolds pipe transition can be partially resolved with a spatially developing direct simulation that carries weakly but finitely perturbed laminar inflow through gradual rather than abrupt transition arriving at the fully developed turbulent state. Our results with this approach show during transition the energy norms of such inlet perturbations grow exponentially rather than algebraically with axial distance. When inlet disturbance is located in the core region, helical vortex filaments evolve into large-scale reverse hairpin vortices. The interaction of these reverse hairpins among themselves or with the near-wall flow when they descend to the surface from the core produces small-scale hairpin packets, which leads to breakdown. When inlet disturbance is near the wall, certain quasi-spanwise structure is stretched into a Lambda vortex, and develops into a large-scale hairpin vortex. Small-scale hairpin packets emerge near the tip region of the large-scale hairpin vortex, and subsequently grow into a turbulent spot, which is itself a local concentration of small-scale hairpin vortices. This vortex dynamics is broadly analogous to that in the boundary layer bypass transition and in the secondary instability and breakdown stage of natural transition, suggesting the possibility of a partial unification. Under parabolic base flow the friction factor overshoots Moody’s correlation. Plug base flow requires stronger inlet disturbance for transition. Accuracy of the results is demonstrated by comparing with analytical solutions before breakdown, and with fully developed turbulence measurements after the completion of transition.


Archive | 2018

DNS of buoyant variable-density turbulent mixing layers

Jon Baltzer; Daniel Livescu


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Statistics of Vortical Structures in Variable-Density Turbulent Mixing Layers

Jon Baltzer; Daniel Livescu


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Statistics of High Atwood Number Turbulent Mixing Layers

Jon Baltzer; Daniel Livescu


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Slow transition of the Osborne Reynolds pipe flow: A direct numerical simulation study.

Xiaohua Wu; Parviz Moin; Ronald J. Adrian; Jon Baltzer


Archive | 2014

Numerical Simulation of Mixing Layers Involving Two Fluids of Different Densities

Jon Baltzer; Daniel Livescu


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Osborne Reynolds pipe flow: direct numerical simulation from laminar to fully-developed turbulence

Ronald J. Adrian; Xiaohua Wu; Parviz Moin; Jon Baltzer


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

DNS of Turbulent Mixing Layers Between Two Fluids of Large Density Difference

Jon Baltzer; Daniel Livescu


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

By-pass mechanism for transition to turbulence in supercritical pipe flow

Ronald J. Adrian; Xiaohua Wu; Parviz Moin; Jon Baltzer; Jean-Pierre Hickey


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Direct numerical simulation from laminar to fully-developed turbulence in spatially evolving pipe flow and flat plate boundary layer

Xiaohua Wu; Parviz Moin; Ronald J. Adrian; Jon Baltzer; Jean-Pierre Hickey

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Xiaohua Wu

Royal Military College of Canada

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Parviz Moin

Center for Turbulence Research

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Daniel Livescu

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jean-Pierre Hickey

Royal Military College of Canada

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