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Autori principali: Heppner, Raz, Chandravamsi, Hemanth, Gichon, Yoav, Frankel, Steven H., Ram, Omri
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03489
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author Heppner, Raz
Chandravamsi, Hemanth
Gichon, Yoav
Frankel, Steven H.
Ram, Omri
author_facet Heppner, Raz
Chandravamsi, Hemanth
Gichon, Yoav
Frankel, Steven H.
Ram, Omri
contents The interaction of a shock wave with a localized constriction in a straight conduit is investigated by systematically varying the blockage ratio in the range 0.35-0.75, the normalized constriction length in the range 0.25-2, and the incident Mach numbers of 1.4 and 1.8. Abrupt rectangular constrictions and smoothly contoured sinusoidal constrictions are considered, as they provide two limiting configurations. Validated Large-eddy simulations resolve both the transient start-up dynamics and the subsequent propagation of reflected and transmitted shock waves. The results show that, for rectangular constrictions, the reflected shock strength depends primarily on the blockage ratio and is largely independent of length, whereas the transmitted shock exhibits measurable sensitivity to constriction length. In contrast, sinusoidal constrictions display a strong coupling between blockage and length, with the reflection process governed by the local contour slope and evolving reflection topology. The start-up process within the constriction occurs over time scales one to two orders of magnitude longer than the shock passage time and is characterized by a sequence of reflection, separation, and flow reorganization events that determine the eventual steady shock configuration. At later times, the reflected shock Mach number scales linearly with blockage ratio, while the transmitted shock strength decreases monotonically with increasing blockage. Based on these trends, semi-empirical models are developed to predict the strengths of both reflected and transmitted shocks across the parameter space considered. These results provide a unified framework for understanding and predicting shock propagation in conduits with localized geometric variations, with direct relevance to compressible internal flows in engineering and natural systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_03489
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Shock propagation through a local constriction
Heppner, Raz
Chandravamsi, Hemanth
Gichon, Yoav
Frankel, Steven H.
Ram, Omri
Fluid Dynamics
The interaction of a shock wave with a localized constriction in a straight conduit is investigated by systematically varying the blockage ratio in the range 0.35-0.75, the normalized constriction length in the range 0.25-2, and the incident Mach numbers of 1.4 and 1.8. Abrupt rectangular constrictions and smoothly contoured sinusoidal constrictions are considered, as they provide two limiting configurations. Validated Large-eddy simulations resolve both the transient start-up dynamics and the subsequent propagation of reflected and transmitted shock waves. The results show that, for rectangular constrictions, the reflected shock strength depends primarily on the blockage ratio and is largely independent of length, whereas the transmitted shock exhibits measurable sensitivity to constriction length. In contrast, sinusoidal constrictions display a strong coupling between blockage and length, with the reflection process governed by the local contour slope and evolving reflection topology. The start-up process within the constriction occurs over time scales one to two orders of magnitude longer than the shock passage time and is characterized by a sequence of reflection, separation, and flow reorganization events that determine the eventual steady shock configuration. At later times, the reflected shock Mach number scales linearly with blockage ratio, while the transmitted shock strength decreases monotonically with increasing blockage. Based on these trends, semi-empirical models are developed to predict the strengths of both reflected and transmitted shocks across the parameter space considered. These results provide a unified framework for understanding and predicting shock propagation in conduits with localized geometric variations, with direct relevance to compressible internal flows in engineering and natural systems.
title Shock propagation through a local constriction
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03489