windresonant
Windresonant is a term used in wind engineering to describe a resonance condition that occurs when atmospheric wind loading excites the natural vibration modes of a structure or flow system, producing sustained oscillations with greater amplitudes at certain wind speeds. The concept lies within aeroelasticity and is related to, but distinct from, flutter and vortex-induced vibration.
The primary mechanisms involve aerodynamic excitation at frequencies near a structure’s natural modes, lock-in or synchronization
In engineering practice, windresonant concerns arise for tall towers, chimneys, bridges, masts, and wind turbine components,
Assessment relies on wind tunnel testing, field monitoring, and aeroelastic simulations to identify resonant wind speeds
See also: wind engineering, aeroelasticity, vortex-induced vibration, resonance.