226 research outputs found
Algebraically growing waves in ducts with sheared mean flow
Standing or traveling waves which vary algebraically with the axial distance in uniform ducts with sheared mean velocity profiles are investigated. The results show that such waves are not possible for ducts with uniform cross sections and fully developed mean flows
Thermal-Boundary-Layer Response to Convected Far-Field Fluid Temperature Changes
Fluid flows of varying temperature occur in heat exchangers, nuclear reactors, nonsteady-flow devices, and combustion engines, among other applications with heat transfer processes that influence energy conversion efficiency. A general numerical method was developed with the capability to predict the transient laminar thermal-boundary-layer response for similar or nonsimilar flow and thermal behaviors. The method was tested for the step change in the far-field flow temperature of a two-dimensional semi-infinite flat plate with steady hydrodynamic boundary layer and constant wall temperature assumptions. Changes in the magnitude and sign of the fluid-wall temperature difference were considered, including flow with no initial temperature difference and built-up thermal boundary layer. The equations for momentum and energy were solved based on the Keller-box finite-difference method. The accuracy of the method was verified by comparing with related transient solutions, the steady-state solution, and by grid independence tests. The existence of a similarity solution is shown for a step change in the far-field temperature and is verified by the computed general solution. Transient heat transfer correlations are presented, which indicate that both magnitude and direction of heat transfer can be significantly different from predictions by quasisteady models commonly used. The deviation is greater and lasts longer for large Prandtl number fluids
Unsteady boundary-layer injection
The boundary-layer equations for two-dimensional incompressible flow are integrated numerically for the flow over a flat plate and a Howarth body. Injection is introduced either impulsively or periodically along a narrow strip. Results indicate that injection perpendicular to the wall is transmitted instantly across the boundary layer and has little effect on the velocity profile parallel to the wall. The effect is a little more noticeable for flows with adverse pressure gradients. Injection parallel to the wall results in fuller velocity profiles. Parallel and oscillatory injection appears to influence the mean. The amplitude of oscillation decreases with distance from the injection strip but further downstream it increases again in a manner reminiscent of an unstable process
A survey of quality of life indicators in the Romanian Roma population following the ‘Decade of Roma Inclusion’ [version 3; referees: 2 approved, 1 approved with reservations]
Background: This study explores how the Roma in Romania, the EU’s most concentrated population, are faring in terms of a number of quality of life indicators, including poverty levels, healthcare, education, water, sanitation, and hygiene. It further explores the role of synthetic populations and modelling in identifying at-risk populations and delivering targeted aid. Methods: 135 surveys were conducted across five geographically diverse Romanian communities. Household participants were selected through a comprehensive random walk method. Analyses were conducted on all data using Pandas for Python. Combining land scan data, time-use survey analyses, interview data, and ArcGIS, the resulting synthetic population was analysed via classification and regression tree (CART) analysis to identify hot-spots of need, both ethnically and geographically. Results: These data indicate that the Roma in Romania face significant disparities in education, with Roma students less likely to progress beyond 8 th grade. In addition, the Roma population remains significantly disadvantaged with regard to safe and secure housing, poverty, and healthcare status, particularly in connection to diarrheal disease. In contrast, however, both Roma and non-Roma in rural areas face difficulties regarding full-time employment, sanitation, and water, sanitation, and hygiene infrastructure. In addition, the use of a synthetic population can generate information about ‘hot spots’ of need, based on geography, ethnicity, and type of aid required. Conclusions: These data demonstrate the challenges that remain to the Roma population in Romania, and also point to the myriad of ways in which all rural Romanians, regardless of ethnicity, are encountering hardship. This study highlights an approach that combines traditional survey data with more wide-reaching geographically based data and CART analysis to determine ‘hot spot’ areas of need in a given population. With the appropriate inputs, this tool can be extrapolated to any population in any country
Effect of coning motion and blowing on the asymmetric side forces on a slender forebody
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