50,731 research outputs found
Circulation and Dissipation on Hot Jupiters
Many global circulation models predict supersonic zonal winds and large
vertical shears in the atmospheres of short-period jovian exoplanets. Using
linear analysis and nonlinear local simulations, we investigate hydrodynamic
dissipation mechanisms to balance the thermal acceleration of these winds. The
adiabatic Richardson criterion remains a good guide to linear stability,
although thermal diffusion allows some modes to violate it at very long
wavelengths and very low growth rates. Nonlinearly, wind speeds saturate at
Mach numbers and Richardson numbers for a broad
range of plausible diffusivities and forcing strengths. Turbulence and vertical
mixing, though accompanied by weak shocks, dominate the dissipation, which
appears to be the outcome of a recurrent Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. An
explicit shear viscosity, as well as thermal diffusivity, is added to ZEUS to
capture dissipation outside of shocks. The wind speed is not monotonic nor
single valued for shear viscosities larger than about of the sound
speed times the pressure scale height. Coarsening the numerical resolution can
also increase the speed. Hence global simulations that are incapable of
representing vertical turbulence and shocks, either because of reduced physics
or because of limited resolution, may overestimate wind speeds. We recommend
that such simulations include artificial dissipation terms to control the Mach
and Richardson numbers and to capture mechanical dissipation as heat.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
Compressibility in turbulent MHD and passive scalar transport: mean-field theory
We develop a mean-field theory of compressibility effects in turbulent
magnetohydrodynamics and passive scalar transport using the quasi-linear
approximation and the spectral -approach. We find that compressibility
decreases the effect and the turbulent magnetic diffusivity both at
small and large magnetic Reynolds numbers, Rm. Similarly, compressibility
decreases the turbulent diffusivity for passive scalars both at small and large
P\'eclet numbers, Pe. On the other hand, compressibility does not affect the
effective pumping velocity of the magnetic field for large Rm, but it decreases
it for small Rm. Density stratification causes turbulent pumping of passive
scalars, but it is found to become weaker with increasing compressibility. No
such pumping effect exists for magnetic fields. However, compressibility
results in a new passive scalar pumping effect from regions of low to high
turbulent intensity both for small and large P\'eclet numbers. It can be
interpreted as compressible turbophoresis of noninertial particles and gaseous
admixtures, while the classical turbophoresis effect exists only for inertial
particles and causes them to be pumped to regions with lower turbulent
intensity.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figure, final paper accepted for publication to JPP,
jpp.cl
The subcritical baroclinic instability in local accretion disc models
(abridged) Aims: We present new results exhibiting a subcritical baroclinic
instability (SBI) in local shearing box models. We describe the 2D and 3D
behaviour of this instability using numerical simulations and we present a
simple analytical model describing the underlying physical process.
Results: A subcritical baroclinic instability is observed in flows stable for
the Solberg-Hoiland criterion using local simulations. This instability is
found to be a nonlinear (or subcritical) instability, which cannot be described
by ordinary linear approaches. It requires a radial entropy gradient weakly
unstable for the Schwartzchild criterion and a strong thermal diffusivity (or
equivalently a short cooling time). In compressible simulations, the
instability produces density waves which transport angular momentum outward
with typically alpha<3e-3, the exact value depending on the background
temperature profile. Finally, the instability survives in 3D, vortex cores
becoming turbulent due to parametric instabilities.
Conclusions: The subcritical baroclinic instability is a robust phenomenon,
which can be captured using local simulations. The instability survives in 3D
thanks to a balance between the 2D SBI and 3D parametric instabilities.
Finally, this instability can lead to a weak outward transport of angular
momentum, due to the generation of density waves by the vortices.Comment: 12 pages, 17 figures, Accepted in A&
An efficient plate heater with uniform surface temperature engineered with effective thermal materials
Extended from its electromagnetic counterpart, transformation thermodynamics
applied to thermal conduction equations can map a virtual geometry into a
physical thermal medium, realizing the manipulation of heat flux with almost
arbitrarily desired diffusion paths, which provides unprecedented opportunities
to create thermal devices unconceivable or deemed impossible before. In this
work we employ this technique to design an efficient plate heater that can
transiently achieve a large surface of uniform temperature powered by a small
thermal source. As opposed to the traditional approach of relying on the
deployment of a resistor network, our approach fully takes advantage of an
advanced functional material system to guide the heat flux to achieve the
desired temperature heating profile. A different set of material parameters for
the transformed device has been developed, offering the parametric freedom for
practical applications. As a proof of concept, the proposed devices are
implemented with engineered thermal materials and show desired heating
behaviors consistent with numerical simulations. Unique applications for these
devices can be envisioned where stringent temperature uniformity and a compact
heat source are both demanded.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
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