Acoustic effects on the temperature spectra, spreading rate of heat, and flow structures of a two-dimensional hot-air jet are studied experimentally. The Reynolds number of the hot jet is approximate to 3500, and the ratio of the jet-exit density to the ambient is 0.78. Without any forcing, the jet exhibits oscillations with a fundamental frequeney f(0) (116 Hz), corresponding to a Strouhal number of 0.31. Under an acoustic forcing, the hot jet is investigated by local temperature measurements and flow visualization. It is found that the acoustic forcing can enhance, or suppress the natural f(0)-oscillations, depending on the forcing frequency F-e. When the forcing frequency is in the band of f(0)+/-4.5 Hz, the natural jet oscillations are enhanced with sharper spectral peaks at a frequency interval of f(0)/2 in the temperature spectra. Correspondingly, larger and more organized vortices are observed in the shear layers, which contribute to the more jet spread of heat. When the forcing frequency is out of the narrow band of f(0)+/-4.5 Hz and below 2f(0), the spectral components of the fundamental frequency are suppressed, and the dominant frequency in the flow becomes F-e rather than f(0). Under the forcing, the hot jet starts to develop the vortical structures at a streamwise location closer to the nozzle, and hence spreads more heat compared with the unforced hot jet. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.