The transition behaviour of a boundary layer with zero pressure gradient in a low-subsonic freestream is examined for a set of wall temperatures below the freestream temperature. Solutions of the boundary layer provided by both an incompressible and a compressible numerical flow
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The transition behaviour of a boundary layer with zero pressure gradient in a low-subsonic freestream is examined for a set of wall temperatures below the freestream temperature. Solutions of the boundary layer provided by both an incompressible and a compressible numerical flow solver are compared to wind tunnel measurements on a uniformly cooled section of a flat plate. The compressible solver features a temperature dependence of the fluid properties, which proves to be crucial for modeling the stability of a thermal boundary layer. Thermal images of the surface show that the spanwise-averaged transition front moves downstream with decreasing wall-to-freestream temperature ratio. At the streamwise station where no frictional heating due to turbulent structures is observed, T-S waves are detected in the measured velocity fluctuation profiles. The experimental data show good correspondence with the numerical linear stability predictions here. Further downstream, where streaks of transition occur, T-S waves can no longer be distinguished, and it is likely that non-linear effects have overtaken the boundary layer flow here. The absolute amplitude and the amplitude growth rate of the velocity perturbations both decrease with the wall temperature in the region where T-S waves are seen, and even more in the non-linear region. It is concluded that uniform surface-cooling stabilizes the boundary layer on a flat plate in an incompressible freestream, but a variable-fluid property solver is required to model the stability characteristics.