Abstract:
The paper deals with a simple method of fixing transition by the injection of small air jets into a boundary layer from a row of surface holes, and describes experiments which establish the effectiveness of the method. A merit of the method is that the rate of air injection can be adjusted to give, at each speed of test, a minimum disturbance of flow necessary to fix transition at the position selected. The minimum rate of air injection for transition is small, about 0.015 times the rate of mass-flow in the boundary layer. The method is especially suitable for high-speed tests since it does not give a local shock wave, which is sometimes present when a surface wire is used to fix transition. The experiments show that a large increase in drag may be caused by a very small leakage of air into the laminar boundary layer of a low-drag wing.