Turbulent Stress Tensors In A Three Dimensional Boundary Layer

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Turbulent Stress Tensors in a Three-dimensional Boundary Layer

One of the major objectives of this research was to determine experimentally the complete Reynolds stress tensor distribution in a pressure-driven three-dimensional turbulent boundary layer.
Three-dimensional Turbulent Flow Research

This is a final summary report on basic research in the three-dimensional turbulent flow problem area. Research in pressure driven skewed boundary layer flows included direct force measurement of local wall shear stress, mean velocity and Reynolds stress measurements in a rectangular curved channel boundary layer and in an unconfined boundary layer, and numerical solutions of both the momentum integral and motion forms of the governing equations.
Three-Dimensional Turbulent Boundary Layers

The IUTAM Symposium on Three-dimensional Turbulent Boundary Layers was suggested by the Gesellschaft für Angewandte Mathe matik (GAMM) and sponsored by the International Union of theor etical and Applied Mechanics. The symposium was organized by H.H. Fernholz (Hermann-Föttinger-Institut für Thermo- und Fluiddynamik der Technischen Universität Berlin) and E. Krause (Aerodynamisches Institut der RWTH Aachen). After two success ful Euromech Colloquia on the same topic in Berlin 1972 and Trondheim 1975 the organizers felt that another meeting should be convened, this time with participants from inside and out side Europe. The aim of the symposium has been to bring together scientists who are actively engaged in boundary layer research, both ex perimental and theoretical. The scope of the meeting encompass ed incompressible and compressible three-dimensional turbulent boundary layers. Special emphasis was laid on economical cal culation methods, on measurements of fluctuating quantities and on measuring techniques designed for and applied success fully to three-dimensional boundary layers. From among thirty-four papers submitted for presentation, twenty six contributions of twenty-five minutes each were selected by the European mernbers of the Scientific Committee. Furthermore there were four invited lectures of forty-five minutes. Short discussions were held directly after each presentation with a long discussion period at the end of each day. The final dis cussion on the last day of the symposium was recorded on tape and is presented in a slightly shortened version as the last contribution in this volume.