bluffkroppen
Bluffkroppen, or the bluff body, is a term used in fluid dynamics to describe a rigid object that presents a blunt front to a moving fluid, in contrast to streamlined shapes with gradually changing cross-sections. The defining characteristic is a relatively large frontal area that causes the boundary layer to separate from the surface, generating a substantial wake behind the object. This flow separation leads to high form drag, which is often the dominant component of the object's aerodynamic or hydrodynamic drag.
Flow around bluff bodies is marked by early boundary-layer separation due to adverse pressure gradients. The
Common examples include circular cylinders, cubes, flat plates oriented perpendicular to the flow, and other geometries
The bluff-body problem is investigated through wind tunnel experiments, water channels, and computational fluid dynamics simulations.