845 research outputs found
Spatiotemporal perspective on the decay of turbulence in wall-bounded flows
Using a reduced model focusing on the in-plane dependence of plane Couette
flow, it is shown that the turbulent-to-laminar relaxation process can be
understood as a nucleation problem similar to that occurring at a thermodynamic
first-order phase transition. The approach, apt to deal with the large
extension of the system considered, challenges the current interpretation in
terms of chaotic transients typical of temporal chaos. The study of the
distribution of the sizes of laminar domains embedded in turbulent flow proves
that an abrupt transition from sustained spatiotemporal chaos to laminar flow
can take place at some given value of the Reynolds number R_{low}, whether or
not the local chaos lifetime, as envisioned within low-dimensional dynamical
systems theory, diverges at finite R beyond R_{low}.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, published in 2009 as a Rapid Communication in
Phys. Rev. E, vol. 79, article 025301, corrected to include erratum Phys.
Rev. E 79, 039904. References to now published material have been updated. A
note has been added pointing to recent related work by D. Barkley
(arXiv:1101.4125v1
Chaotic dynamics of superconductor vortices in the plastic phase
We present numerical simulation results of driven vortex lattices in presence
of random disorder at zero temperature. We show that the plastic dynamics is
readily understood in the framework of chaos theory. Intermittency "routes to
chaos" have been clearly identified, and positive Lyapunov exponents and
broad-band noise, both characteristic of chaos, are found to coincide with the
differential resistance peak. Furthermore, the fractal dimension of the strange
attractor reveals that the chaotic dynamics of vortices is low-dimensional.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Chaos and plasticity in superconductor vortices: a low-dimensional dynamics
We present new results of numerical simulations for driven vortex lattices in
presence of random disorder at zero temperature. We show that the plastic
dynamics of vortices display dissipative chaos. Intermittency "routes to chaos"
have been clearly identified below the differential resistance peak. The peak
region is characterized by positive Lyapunov exponents characteristic of chaos,
and low frequency broad-band noise. Furthermore we find a low fractal dimension
of the strange attractor, which suggests that only a few dynamical variables
are sufficient to model the complex plastic dynamics of vortices.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Physical Review
Regression analysis with missing data and unknown colored noise: application to the MICROSCOPE space mission
The analysis of physical measurements often copes with highly correlated
noises and interruptions caused by outliers, saturation events or transmission
losses. We assess the impact of missing data on the performance of linear
regression analysis involving the fit of modeled or measured time series. We
show that data gaps can significantly alter the precision of the regression
parameter estimation in the presence of colored noise, due to the frequency
leakage of the noise power. We present a regression method which cancels this
effect and estimates the parameters of interest with a precision comparable to
the complete data case, even if the noise power spectral density (PSD) is not
known a priori. The method is based on an autoregressive (AR) fit of the noise,
which allows us to build an approximate generalized least squares estimator
approaching the minimal variance bound. The method, which can be applied to any
similar data processing, is tested on simulated measurements of the MICROSCOPE
space mission, whose goal is to test the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) with
a precision of . In this particular context the signal of interest is
the WEP violation signal expected to be found around a well defined frequency.
We test our method with different gap patterns and noise of known PSD and find
that the results agree with the mission requirements, decreasing the
uncertainty by a factor 60 with respect to ordinary least squares methods. We
show that it also provides a test of significance to assess the uncertainty of
the measurement.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Phase-locking modes in a bidimensional network of coupled water jets
International audienceIn this paper, we investigate the dynamics of a bidimensional network of coupled water jets impinging from below on a water/air interface. For each jet, a transition is observed at a critical flow rate value for which the surface bump at the vertical of the jet starts oscillating at a well-defined frequency. We infer that this oscillatory mode is the materialization at the surface of a helical instability of the submerged laminar jet. When coupled together, the bidimensionai network of oscillators exhibits monoperiodic collective modes whose spatial arrangements are similar to those encountered in crystals. A collection of phase-locking modes is observed for each geometry, and stability diagrams are constructed. Analysis of the coupling between the jets reveals a long distance coupling through surface waves. A tuning criterion is proposed to explain the bifurcation from one mode to another. Finally, the symmetries of the system are investigated using two different systematic schemes. The predictions are compared with the observations and some features of the particular topology of phase-locking modes are explained
Subcritical transition to turbulence in plane Couette flow
International audienceThe transition to turbulence in plane Couette flow was studied experimentally. The subcritical aspect of this transition is revealed by the stable coexistence of laminar and turbulent domains. By perturbing the flow, a critical Reynolds number has been determined, above which an artificially triggered turbulent spot can persist. The study of the spatiotemporal evolution of these spots shows, among other things, the existence of waves traveling away from the turbulent regions
Dynamic Modes of Microcapsules in Steady Shear Flow: Effects of Bending and Shear Elasticities
The dynamics of microcapsules in steady shear flow was studied using a
theoretical approach based on three variables: The Taylor deformation parameter
, the inclination angle , and the phase angle of
the membrane rotation. It is found that the dynamic phase diagram shows a
remarkable change with an increase in the ratio of the membrane shear and
bending elasticities. A fluid vesicle (no shear elasticity) exhibits three
dynamic modes: (i) Tank-treading (TT) at low viscosity of
internal fluid ( and relaxes to constant values), (ii)
Tumbling (TB) at high ( rotates), and (iii) Swinging
(SW) at middle and high shear rate (
oscillates). All of three modes are accompanied by a membrane ()
rotation. For microcapsules with low shear elasticity, the TB phase with no
rotation and the coexistence phase of SW and TB motions are induced by
the energy barrier of rotation. Synchronization of rotation with
TB rotation or SW oscillation occurs with integer ratios of rotational
frequencies. At high shear elasticity, where a saddle point in the energy
potential disappears, intermediate phases vanish, and either or
rotation occurs. This phase behavior agrees with recent simulation results of
microcapsules with low bending elasticity.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Exactly quantized dynamics of classical incommensurate sliders
We report peculiar velocity quantization phenomena in the classical motion of
an idealized 1D solid lubricant, consisting of a harmonic chain interposed
between two periodic sliders. The ratio v_cm/v_ext of the chain center-of-mass
velocity to the externally imposed relative velocity of the sliders stays
pinned to exact "plateau" values for wide ranges of parameters, such as sliders
corrugation amplitudes, external velocity, chain stiffness and dissipation, and
is strictly determined by the commensurability ratios alone. The phenomenon is
explained by one slider rigidly dragging the kinks that the chain forms with
the other slider. Possible consequences of these results for some real systems
are discussed.Comment: 5 pags 4 fig
Iterated maps for clarinet-like systems
The dynamical equations of clarinet-like systems are known to be reducible to
a non-linear iterated map within reasonable approximations. This leads to time
oscillations that are represented by square signals, analogous to the Raman
regime for string instruments. In this article, we study in more detail the
properties of the corresponding non-linear iterations, with emphasis on the
geometrical constructions that can be used to classify the various solutions
(for instance with or without reed beating) as well as on the periodicity
windows that occur within the chaotic region. In particular, we find a regime
where period tripling occurs and examine the conditions for intermittency. We
also show that, while the direct observation of the iteration function does not
reveal much on the oscillation regime of the instrument, the graph of the high
order iterates directly gives visible information on the oscillation regime
(characterization of the number of period doubligs, chaotic behaviour, etc.)
Chaotic, staggered and polarized dynamics in opinion forming: the contrarian effect
We revisit the no tie breaking 2-state Galam contrarian model of opinion
dynamics for update groups of size 3. While the initial model assumes a
constant density of contrarians a for both opinions, it now depends for each
opinion on its global support. Proportionate contrarians are thus found to
indeed preserve the former case main results. However, restricting the
contrarian behavior to only the current collective majority, makes the dynamics
more complex with novel features. For a density a<a_c=1/9 of one-sided
contrarians, a chaotic basin is found in the fifty-fifty region separated from
two majority-minority point attractors, one on each side. For 1/9<a< 0.301 only
the chaotic basin survives. In the range a>0.301 the chaotic basin disappears
and the majority starts to alternate between the two opinions with a staggered
flow towards two point attractors. We then study the effect of both, decoupling
the local update time sequence from the contrarian behavior activation, and a
smoothing of the majority rule. A status quo driven bias for contrarian
activation is also considered. Introduction of unsettled agents driven in the
debate on a contrarian basis is shown to only shrink the chaotic basin. The
model may shed light to recent apparent contradictory elections with on the one
hand very tied results like in US in 2000 and in Germany in 2002 and 2005, and
on the other hand, a huge majority like in France in 2002.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
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