867 research outputs found
Cascades and transitions in turbulent flows
Turbulence is characterized by the non-linear cascades of energy and other
inviscid invariants across a huge range of scales, from where they are injected
to where they are dissipated. Recently, new experimental, numerical and
theoretical works have revealed that many turbulent configurations deviate from
the ideal 3D/2D isotropic cases characterized by the presence of a strictly
direct/inverse energy cascade, respectively. We review recent works from a
unified point of view and we present a classification of all known transfer
mechanisms. Beside the classical cases of direct and inverse cascades, the
different scenarios include: split cascades to small and large scales
simultaneously, multiple/dual cascades of different quantities, bi-directional
cascades where direct and inverse transfers of the same invariant coexist in
the same scale-range and finally equilibrium states where no cascades are
present, including the case when a condensate is formed. We classify all
transitions as the control parameters are changed and we analyse when and why
different configurations are observed. Our discussion is based on a set of
paradigmatic applications: helical turbulence, rotating and/or stratified
flows, MHD and passive/active scalars where the transfer properties are altered
as one changes the embedding dimensions, the thickness of the domain or other
relevant control parameters, as the Reynolds, Rossby, Froude, Peclet, or Alfven
numbers. We discuss the presence of anomalous scaling laws in connection with
the intermittent nature of the energy dissipation in configuration space. An
overview is also provided concerning cascades in other applications such as
bounded flows, quantum, relativistic and compressible turbulence, and active
matter, together with implications for turbulent modelling. Finally, we present
a series of open problems and challenges that future work needs to address.Comment: accepted for publication on Physics Reports 201
An investigation of price - volume intraday patterns under "Bull" and "Bear" market conditions
There has been a common belief among stock market practitioners that stock prices move along with trading volume creating certain patterns in price and volume formation. Nevertheless, the above argument was hardly recognised by the academic community since for a number of years statistical results indicated that the stock market is an efficient market i.e. a market where past available information is of no use in predicting future returns profitably, and/or non rational factors do not influence stock prices; The last decade the research for market efficiency was expanded and the use of new large data sets and advanced techniques indicated deviations from the predictions of the Efficient Market Hypothesis (E.M.H.). This study investigates whether there exists a relationship between stock returns and trading volume in the Athens Stock Exchange (A.S.E.) and if such a relationship forms evidence against the E.M.H. We believe that we add to the research in this area since we use intraday data and investigate for a possible relationship under different market states and for different categories of shares.peer-reviewe
Anisotropic fluxes and nonlocal interactions in MHD turbulence
We investigate the locality or nonlocality of the energy transfer and of the
spectral interactions involved in the cascade for decaying magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) flows in the presence of a uniform magnetic field at various
intensities. The results are based on a detailed analysis of three-dimensional
numerical flows at moderate Reynold numbers. The energy transfer functions, as
well as the global and partial fluxes, are examined by means of different
geometrical wavenumber shells. On the one hand, the transfer functions of the
two conserved Els\"asser energies and are found local in both the
directions parallel (-direction) and perpendicular (-direction)
to the magnetic guide-field, whatever the -strength. On the other
hand, from the flux analysis, the interactions between the two
counterpropagating Els\"asser waves become nonlocal. Indeed, as the -intensity is increased, local interactions are strongly decreased and the
interactions with small modes dominate the cascade. Most of the energy
flux in the -direction is due to modes in the plane at , while
the weaker cascade in the -direction is due to the modes with .
The stronger magnetized flows tends thus to get closer to the weak turbulence
limit where the three-wave resonant interactions are dominating. Hence, the
transition from the strong to the weak turbulence regime occurs by reducing the
number of effective modes in the energy cascade.Comment: Submitted to PR
Shell to shell energy transfer in MHD, Part II: Kinematic dynamo
We study the transfer of energy between different scales for forced
three-dimensional MHD turbulent flows in the kinematic dynamo regime. Two
different forces are examined: a non-helical Taylor Green flow with magnetic
Prandtl number P_M=0.4, and a helical ABC flow with P_M=1. This analysis allows
us to examine which scales of the velocity flow are responsible for dynamo
action, and identify which scales of the magnetic field receive energy directly
from the velocity field and which scales receive magnetic energy through the
cascade of the magnetic field from large to small scales. Our results show that
the turbulent velocity fluctuations are responsible for the magnetic field
amplification in the small scales (small scale dynamo) while the large scale
field is amplified mostly due to the large scale flow. A direct cascade of the
magnetic field energy from large to small scales is also present and is a
complementary mechanism for the increase of the magnetic field in the small
scales. Input of energy from the velocity field in the small magnetic scales
dominates over the energy that is cascaded down from the large scales until the
large-scale peak of the magnetic energy spectrum is reached. At even smaller
scales, most of the magnetic energy input is from the cascading process.Comment: Submitted to PR
Financial crisis, ownership effect and investors sentiment : empirical evidence from the banking sector in Greece
According to financial theory, in an efficient market investors reflect fully and instantaneously all relevant information on security prices in a way consistent with the economic theory. Empirical research on market efficiency investigates if there is past available information which can help to predict future returns profitably, as well as if factors not related to rational economic behaviour, influence stock prices. Financial manias and panics are examples which serve as obvious evidence against the efficient market theory. This study investigates the stock price behaviour of a number of listed banks prior and during the financial crisis of 2008-2009. Banks under investigation were separated into two categories i.e. large banks and small banks. These two categories behaved differently under the crisis. We have serious reasons to believe that the different behaviour was not due to different performance or risk exposure but due to different ownership structure. Big banks, with high institutional participation indicated stock price dynamics during the crisis, possibly because of the fact that institutional investors were affected by correlated negative sentiment or mimicking minimising loss strategies irrespectively of the quality of the banks’ assets. Thus, the ownership structure of an asset may be of importance to its stock price behaviour contrary to the prediction of the efficient market theory.peer-reviewe
Anomalous exponents at the onset of an instability
Critical exponents are calculated exactly at the onset of an instability,
using asymptotic expansiontechniques. When the unstable mode is subject to
multiplicative noise whose spectrum at zero frequency vanishes, we show that
the critical behavior can be anomalous, i.e. the mode amplitude X scales with
departure from onset \mu as with an exponent
different from its deterministic value. This behavior is observed in a direct
numerical simulation of the dynamo instability and our results provide a
possible explanation to recent experimental observations
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