On displacement thickness

Abstract
Four alternative theoretical treatments of ‘displacement thickness’, and, generally, of the influence of boundary layers and wakes on the flow outside them, are set out, first for two-dimensional, and then for three-dimensional, laminar or turbulent, incompressible flow. They may be called the methods of ‘flow reduction’, ‘equivalent sources’, ‘velocity comparison’ and ‘mean vorticity’.The principal expression obtained for the displacement thickness δ1 in three-dimensional flow may be written if, as orthogonal coordinates (x, y) specifying position on the surface, we choose x as the velocity potential of the external flow, and y as a coordinate, constant along the external-flow streamlines, such that hy dy is the distance between (x, y) and (x, y + dy); and if also δx and δy are the streamwise and transverse ‘volume-flow thicknesses’ z is the distance from the surface, u and v are the x and y components of velocity, and u takes the value U just outside the boundary layer.

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