Resolvent and Spectral POD Analyses of a Laminar Separation Bubble

ORAL

Abstract

Resolvent analysis is an increasingly popular technique capable of providing insight about the input-output characteristics of a given fluid flow at a specified frequency and wavenumber. Moreover, the resolvent of the linearized Navier-Stokes operator can be used to compute the pseudospectrum, which can be important for non-normal operators as often arise in shear flows.

Direct numerical simulations are performed for three-dimensional laminar boundary layer flow in which suction and blowing are imposed at the top of the computational domain to generate a separation bubble at the bottom surface. The linear input-output (resolvent) operator is computed relative to the spanwise- and time-averaged mean flow, and the optimal forcing and response modes are obtained via a randomized singular value decomposition. The resulting forcing modes illustrate regions where the flow is most sensitive to perturbations. The corresponding response modes are compared with spectral (frequency-domain) POD modes obtained from snapshots of the direct numerical simulations, and the two sets of modes show similar features.

*This material is based upon work supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-17-1-0084.

Presenters

  • Alberto Padovan

    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Hao Zhang

    • Princeton University
  • Alberto Padovan

    • Princeton University
  • Clarence W. Rowley

    • Princeton University
  • Wen Wu

    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Charles Vivant Meneveau

    • Johns Hopkins University
    • Johns Hopkins Univ
    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
  • Rajat Mittal

    • Johns Hopkins University