Abstract
Experiments have been done on the effects of heat transfer on wall-pressure distributions through separated regions with both laminar and turbulent boundary layers at a free-stream Mach number of about 3. The temperature of the flat plate on which the boundary layer was formed could be varied from about − 35° C to + 75° C. According to theory, this variation should have produced appreciable alterations at a laminar separation point in either the pressure or the pressure gradient, but no sign of this appeared in the overall pressure distributions, which, for laminar layers, remained unaffected by wall temperature. A possible explanation is given for this apparent discrepancy between theory and experiment. With turbulent layers, the variations in wall temperature did produce small changes in the pressure distributions. However, for most practical purposes such changes could be ignored. Hence the convenient conclusion is suggested that in supersonic separating flow with either a laminar or a turbulent boundary layer the pressure distributions are not significantly affected by moderate variations in wall temperature.

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