Abstract
This paper is concerned with some statistical properties of the displacement of a marked fluid particle released from a given position in a turbulent shear flow, and in particular with the dispersion about the mean position after a long time. It is known that the dispersion takes a simple asymptotic form when the particle velocity is a stationary random function of time, and that analogous results are obtainable when the particle velocity can be transformed to a stationary random function by suitable stretching of the velocity and time scales. The basic hypothesis of the paper is that, in steady free turbulent shear flows which are generated at a point and have a similar structure at different stations downstream, the velocity of a fluid particle exhibits a corresponding Lagrangian similarity and can be so transformed to a stationary random function.The velocity and time scales characterizing the motion of a fluid particle at time t after release at the origin are determined in terms of the powers with which the Eulerian length and velocity scales of the turbulence vary with distance x from the origin. The time scale has the same dependence on t for all jets, wakes and mixing layers (and also for decaying homogeneous turbulence) possessing the usual kind of Eulerian similarity. The dispersion of a particle in the longitudinal or mean-flow direction (and likewise that in the lateral direction in cases of two-dimensional mean flow) is found to vary with t in such a way as to be proportional to the thickness of the shear layer at the mean position of the particle. The way in which the maximum value of the mean concentration of marked fluid falls off with t (for release of a single particle) or with x (for continuous release) is also found.

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