Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-s9k8s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-20T04:22:32.888Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On the stability of plane shocks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

William K. Van Moorhem
Affiliation:
Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Cornell University, Itheca, New York 14850 Present address: Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA.
A. R. George
Affiliation:
Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Cornell University, Itheca, New York 14850

Abstract

The stability of perturbed normal shock waves is considered. Shock perturbations depend directly upon the disturbances in the flow adjacent to the shock. In the present paper an initially stationary shock is assumed to be perturbed by acoustic waves reaching it from the downstream side. This case corresponds to the situation occurring in shock diffraction or reflexion. Two-dimensional problems of this type have been investigated previously, both analytically and experimentally. These previous analytic results have, in all cases, indicated that the perturbations of the shock decay with time as $t^{\frac{3}{2}}$, while experimentally both t½ and $t^{\frac{3}{2}}$ decays have been observed. It is demonstrated in the present investigation that, when waves are continuously generated at a point or points behind the shock, a t½ decay of the shock perturbations will occur, corresponding to the decay of the incident waves. However, when the source of waves is located only at the shock, as in a diffraction problem, $t^{-\frac{3}{2}}$ decay occurs owing to the cancellation, to lowest order, of the incident wave by its reflexion from the shock. These results explain the divergence between theory and experiment in this area, since the experiments giving the slower decay contained a source of waves behind the shock.

It is concluded that shock stability can only be considered in the context of the type of disturbances incident upon the shock.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1975 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bowman, R. M. 1966 Investigation of shock front topography in shock tubes. Ph.D. thesis, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.
Brillouin, J. 1955 Réflexion et réfraction d'ondes acoustiques par unc onde de choc. Acoustics, 5, 149. (Trans. 1957 Reflection and refraction of acoustic waves by a shock. N.A.C.A. Tech. Memo. no. 1409.)Google Scholar
Briscoe, M. G. & Kovitz, A. A. 1968 Experimental and theoretical study of the stability of plane shock waves reflected normally from a perturbed flat wall. J. FZuid Mech. 31, 529.Google Scholar
D'Iakov, S. P. 1958 The interaction of shock waves with small perturbations. Sot,. Phys., J. Exp. Theor. Phys. 6, 729.Google Scholar
Freeman, N. C. 1955 A theory of the stability of plane shock waves. Proc. Roy. Soc. A 228, 341.Google Scholar
Freeman, N. C. 1957 On the stability of plane shock waves. J. Fluid nfech. 2, 397.Google Scholar
Friedlander, F. G. 1946 Simple progressive solutions of the wave equation. Proc. Cunab. Phil. Soc. 43, 360.Google Scholar
Johnson, W. R. & Laporte, O. 1958 Interaction of cylindrical sound waves with a stationary shock wave. Phys. Fluids, 1, 82.Google Scholar
Kontorovich, V. M. 1959 Reflection and refraction of sound by shock waves. Sov. Phye., Acoustics, 5, 320.Google Scholar
Kovitz, A. A. & Briscoe, M. G. 1968 Stability of a plane shock wave in free space and in the presence of rigid or interfacial boundaries. J. Acoust. SOC. Am. 45, 1157.Google Scholar
Lapworth, M. C. 1959 An experimental investigation of plane shock waves. J. FLuid Mech. 6, 469.Google Scholar
Liuhthill, M. J. 1949 The diffraction of a blast. J. Proc. Roy. Soc. A 198, 454.Google Scholar
Mckenzie, J. F. & Westphal, K. O. 1968 Interaction of linear waves with oblique shock waves. Phys. Fluids, 11, 2350.Google Scholar
Moore, F. K. 1954 Unsteady oblique interaction of a shock wave with a plane disturbance. N.A.C.A. Rep. no. 1165.Google Scholar
Nikolaev, I. M. 1965 Solution for a plane shock wave moving through a lightly curved interface of two media. J. AppL. Math. Mech. 29, 785.Google Scholar
Sears, W. R. 1954 Small perturbation theory. In General Theory of High-speed Aero-dynamics, p. 61. Princeton University Press.
Van Moorhem, W. K. 1971 The interaction of two dimensional acoustic waves with plane shocks. Ph.D. thesis, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Zaidel, R. M. 1960 Shock wave from a slightly curved piston. J. Appl. Math. Mech. 24, 316.Google Scholar