It is well known that once the flow of a gas becomes supersonic, it behaves very differently to subsonic flow:
- Velocity increases as flow area increases.
- Velocity decreases along a pipe with friction.
- Velocity decreases if a flow is heated externally.
The opposite is true for all of these in the case of subsonic flow.
I am familiar with the mathematical explanations that go through several pages of 1D compressible flow theory; however, I struggle to understand intuitively why a supersonic flow behaves so differently to a subsonic flow, in the sense that it practically reverses in behavior like this.
Does anyone know of a good, intuitive explanation as to why supersonic flows behave like this (beyond just: 'it does, because the math says so')?
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