Richtmyer-Meshkov instability of a thin curtain of heavy gas (SF6) embedded
in air and accelerated by a planar shock wave (Mach 1.2) leads to the grow
th of interfacial perturbations in the curtain and to mixing. Our experimen
ts produce a phenomenological description of the mixing transition and inci
pient turbulence during the first millisecond after the shock interaction.
Growth of scales both larger and smaller than that of initial perturbations
is visually observed and quantified by applying a wavelet transform to las
er-sheet images of the evolving gas curtain. Histogram and wavelet analyses
show an abrupt mixing transition for a multimode initial perturbation that
is not apparent for single-mode perturbations. [S1070-6631(99)00501-2].