6,620 research outputs found

    Effect of molecular relaxation on the propagation of sonic booms through a stratified atmosphere

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    Nonlinear acoustic wave propagation through a stratified atmosphere is considered. The initial signal is taken to be an isolated N-wave, which is the disturbance that is generated some distance away from a supersonic body in horizontal flight. The effect of cylindrical spreading and exponential density stratification on the propagation of the disturbance is considered, with the shock structure controlled by molecular relaxation mechanisms and by thermoviscous diffusion. An augmented Burgers equation is obtained and asymptotic solutions are derived based on the limit of small dissipation and dispersion. For a single relaxation mode, the solution depends on whether relaxation alone can support the shock or whether a sub-shock arises controlled by other mechanisms. The resulting shock structures are known as fully dispersed and partly dispersed shocks, respectively. In this paper, the spatial location of the transition between fully dispersed and partly dispersed shocks is identified for shocks propagating above and below the horizontal. This phenomenon is important in understanding the character of sonic booms since the transition to a partly dispersed shock structure leads to the appearance of a shorter scale in the shock rise-time, associated with the embedded sub-shock

    Effect of molecular relaxation processes on travelling wave solutions of sonic boom waveforms

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    Asymptotic and numerical analyses are presented for the travelling wave solution of the one-dimensional acoustic wave associated with the sonic boom, subject to thermoviscous dissipation and two molecular relaxation processes. Examination of how these relaxation processes affect the propagation of a weak shock is discussed in detail

    Review Article: MHD Wave propagation near coronal null points of magnetic fields

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    We present a comprehensive review of MHD wave behaviour in the neighbourhood of coronal null points: locations where the magnetic field, and hence the local Alfvén speed, is zero. The behaviour of all three MHD wave modes, i.e. the Alfvén wave and the fast and slow magnetoacoustic waves, has been investigated in the neighbourhood of 2D, 2.5D and (to a certain extent) 3D magnetic null points, for a variety of assumptions, configurations and geometries. In general, it is found that the fast magnetoacoustic wave behaviour is dictated by the Alfvén-speed profile. In a β=0 plasma, the fast wave is focused towards the null point by a refraction effect and all the wave energy, and thus current density, accumulates close to the null point. Thus, null points will be locations for preferential heating by fast waves. Independently, the Alfvén wave is found to propagate along magnetic fieldlines and is confined to the fieldlines it is generated on. As the wave approaches the null point, it spreads out due to the diverging fieldlines. Eventually, the Alfvén wave accumulates along the separatrices (in 2D) or along the spine or fan-plane (in 3D). Hence, Alfvén wave energy will be preferentially dissipated at these locations. It is clear that the magnetic field plays a fundamental role in the propagation and properties of MHD waves in the neighbourhood of coronal null points. This topic is a fundamental plasma process and results so far have also lead to critical insights into reconnection, mode-coupling, quasi-periodic pulsations and phase-mixing
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