Taylor–Maccoll flow refers to the steady flow behind a conical shock wave that is attached to a solid cone. The flow is named after G. I. Taylor and J. W. Maccoll, whom described the flow in 1933, guided by an earlier work of Theodore von Kármán.[1][2][3]

Mathematical description edit

 
Coordinate system, where the dotted line depicts conical shock

Consider a steady supersonic flow past a solid cone that has a semi-vertical angle  . A conical shock wave can form in this situation, with the vertex of the shock wave lying at the vertex of the solid cone. If it were a two-dimensional problem, i.e., for a supersonic flow past a wedge, then the incoming stream would have deflected through an angle   upon crossing the shock wave so that streamlines behind the shock wave would be parallel to the wedge sides. Such a simple turnover of streamlines is not possible for three-dimensional case. After passing through the shock wave, the streamlines are curved and only asymptotically they approach the generators of the cone. The curving of streamlines is accompanied by a gradual increase in density and decrease in velocity, in addition to those increments/decrements effected at the shock wave.[4]

The direction and magnitude of the velocity immediately behind the oblique shock wave is given by weak branch of the shock polar. This particularly suggests that for each value of incoming Mach number  , there exists a maximum value of   beyond which shock polar do not provide solution under in which case the conical shock wave will have detached from the solid surface (see Mach reflection). These detached cases are not considered here. The flow immediately behind the oblique conical shock wave is typically supersonic, although however when   is close to  , it can be subsonic. The supersonic flow behind the shock wave will become subsonic as it evolves downstream.

Since all incident streamlines intersect the conical shock wave at the same angle, the intensity of the shock wave is constant. This particularly means that entropy jump across the shock wave is also constant throughout. In this case, the flow behind the shock wave is a potential flow.[4] Hence we can introduce the velocity potential   such that  . Since the problem do not have any length scale and is clearly axisymmetric, the velocity field   and the pressure field   will be turn out to functions of the polar angle   only (the origin of the spherical coordinates   is taken to be located at the vertex). This means that we have

 

The steady potential flow is governed by the equation[4]

 

where the sound speed   is expressed as a function of the velocity magnitude   only. Substituting the above assumed form for the velocity field, into the governing equation, we obtain the general Taylor–Maccoll equation

 


The equation is simplified greatly for a polytropic gas for which  ,[4] i.e.,

 

where   is the specific heat ratio and   is the stagnation enthalpy. Introducing this formula into the general Taylor–Maccoll equation and introducing a non-dimensional function  , where   (the speed of the potential flow when it flows out into a vacuum), we obtain, for the polytropic gas, the Taylor–Maccoll equation,

 

The equation must satisfy the condition that   (no penetration on the solid surface) and also must correspond to conditions behind the shock wave at  , where   is the half-angle of shock cone, which must be determined as part of the solution for a given incoming flow Mach number   and  . The Taylor–Maccoll equation has no known explicit solution and it is integrated numerically.

Kármán–Moore solution edit

When the cone angle is very small, the flow is nearly parallel everywhere in which case, an exact solution can be found, as shown by Theodore von Kármán and Norton B. Moore in 1932.[2] The solution is more apparent in the cylindrical coordinates   (the   here is the radial distance from the  -axis, and not the density). If   is the speed of the incoming flow, then we write  , where   is a small correction and satisfies

 

where   is the Mach number of the incoming flow. We expect the velocity components to depend only on  , i.e.,   in cylindrical coordinates, which means that we must have  , where   is a self-similar coordinate. The governing equation reduces to

 

On the surface of the cone  , we must have   and conesequently  .

In the small-angle approximation, the weak shock cone is given by  . The trivial solution for   describes the uniform flow upstream of the shock cone, whereas the non-trivial solution satisfying the boundary condition on the solid surface behind the shock wave is given by

 

We therefore have[4]

 

exhibiting a logarthmic singularity as   The velocity components are given by

 

The pressure on the surface of the cone   is found to be   (in this formula,   is the density of the incoming gas).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Taylor, G. I., & Maccoll, J. W. (1933). The air pressure on a cone moving at high speeds.—I. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character, 139(838), 278-297.
  2. ^ a b Von Karman, T., & Moore, N. B. (1932). Resistance of slender bodies moving with supersonic velocities, with special reference to projectiles. Transactions of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 54(2), 303-310.
  3. ^ Maccoll, J. W. (1937). The conical shock wave formed by a cone moving at a high speed. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A-Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 159(898), 459-472.
  4. ^ a b c d e Landau, L. D., & Lifshitz, E. M. (2013). Fluid mechanics: Landau And Lifshitz: course of theoretical physics, Volume 6 (Vol. 6). Elsevier. section 123. pages 432-434.