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Featured researches published by Nicole Sharp.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2008

Lagrangian measurements of inertial particle accelerations in a turbulent boundary layer

Sergiy Gerashchenko; Nicole Sharp; Stephanie Neuscamman; Z. Warhaft

Two-dimensional Lagrangian acceleration statistics of inertial particles in a turbulent boundary layer with free-stream turbulence are determined by means of a particle tracking technique using a high-speed camera moving along the side of the wind tunnel at the mean flow speed. The boundary layer is formed above a flat plate placed horizontally in the tunnel, and water droplets are fed into the flow using two different methods: sprays placed downstream from an active grid, and tubes fed into the boundary layer from humidifiers. For the flow conditions studied, the sprays produce Stokes numbers varying from 0.47 to 1.2, and the humidifiers produce Stokes numbers varying from 0.035 to 0.25, where the low and high values refer to the outer boundary layer edge and the near-wall region, respectively. The Froude number is approximately 1.0 for the sprays and 0.25 for the humidifiers, with a small variation within the boundary layer. The free-stream turbulence is varied by operating the grid in the active mode as well as a passive mode (the latter behaves as a conventional grid). The boundary layer momentum-thickness Reynolds numbers are 840 and 725 for the active and passive grid respectively. At the outer edge of the boundary layer, where the shear is weak, the acceleration probability density functions are similar to those previously observed in isotropic turbulence for inertial particles. As the boundary layer plate is approached, the tails of the probability density functions narrow, become negatively skewed, and their peak occurs at negative accelerations (decelerations in the streamwise direction). The mean deceleration and its root mean square (r.m.s.) increase to large values close to the plate. These effects are more pronounced at higher Stokes number. In the vertical direction, there is a slight downward mean deceleration and its r.m.s., which is lower in magnitude than that of the streamwise component, peaks in the buffer region. Although there are free-stream turbulence effects, and the complex boundary layer structure plays an important role, a simple model suggests that the acceleration behaviour is dominated by shear, gravity and inertia. The results are contrasted with inertial particles in isotropic turbulence and with fluid particle acceleration statistics in a boundary layer. The background velocity field is documented by means of hot-wire anemometry and laser Doppler velocimetry measurements. These appear to be the first Lagrangian acceleration measurements of inertial particles in a shear flow.


Physics of Fluids | 2009

EFFECTS OF LARGE-SCALE FREE STREAM TURBULENCE ON A TURBULENT BOUNDARY LAYER

Nicole Sharp; Stephanie Neuscamman; Z. Warhaft

Results of a wind tunnel experiment in which there are systematic variations of free stream turbulence above a flat-plate boundary layer are presented. Upstream of the plate, an active grid generates free stream turbulence varying in intensity from 0.25% to 10.5%. The momentum thickness Reynolds number of the boundary layer varies from 550 to nearly 3000. In all cases, the ratio of the free stream turbulence length scale to the boundary layer depth is greater than unity. Hotwire measurements show that, at high turbulence intensities, the effects of the free stream turbulence extend deep into the boundary layer, affecting the wall stress as well as the small-scale (derivative) statistics. Premultiplied energy spectra show a double peak. At very low free stream turbulence intensities these peaks are associated with the inner and outer scales of the turbulent boundary layer, but at high turbulence intensities the free stream energy peak dominates over the boundary layer’s outer scale. The implications of the...


52nd Aerospace Sciences Meeting | 2014

Roughness-Induced Transient Growth on a Hypersonic Blunt Cone

Nicole Sharp; Edward B. White

The effects of surface roughness on boundary-layer disturbance growth and laminar-toturbulent transition are not well understood, especially in hypersonic boundary layers. The transient growth mechanism that produces algebraic growth of streamwise streaks via decaying streamwise vortices may play a key role in roughness-induced transition but has not previously been deliberately observed in hypersonic flow. To make such measurements, the present work studies the boundary layer of a 5° half-angle smooth cone paired with a slightly blunted nosetip and a ring of periodically-spaced discrete roughness elements. Measurements are made in the low-disturbance Texas A&M Mach 6 Quiet Tunnel. The roughness element height is approximately equal to the boundary-layer thickness, yet no transition to turbulence is observed for freestream unit Reynolds numbers between 8.7 × 10 6


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

F*** Yeah Fluid Dynamics: Getting started in science communication

Nicole Sharp


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

In a sea of sticky molasses: The physics of the Boston Molasses Flood

Nicole Sharp; Jordan Kennedy; Shmuel M. Rubinstein


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

F*** Yeah Fluid Dynamics: Inside the science communication process

Nicole Sharp


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

F*** Yeah Fluid Dynamics: On science outreach and appealing to broad audiences

Nicole Sharp


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Discrete surface roughness effects on a blunt hypersonic cone in a quiet tunnel

Nicole Sharp; Edward D. White


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

F*** Yeah Fluid Dynamics: Lessons from online outreach

Nicole Sharp


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Surface roughness effects on a blunt hypersonic cone

Nicole Sharp; Jerrod Hofferth; Edward D. White

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Edward D. White

Air Force Institute of Technology

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