904 research outputs found
Dynamics of Low Anisotropy Morphologies in Directional Solidification
We report experimental results on quasi-two-dimensional diffusion limited
growth in directionally solidified succinonitrile with small amounts of
poly(ethylene oxide), acetone, or camphor as a solute. Seaweed growth, or dense
branching morphology, is selected by growing grains close to the
plane, where the in-plane surface tension is nearly isotropic. The observed
growth morphologies are very sensitive to small anisotropies in surface tension
caused by misorientations from the plane. Different seaweed
morphologies are found, including the degenerate, the stabilized, and the
strongly tilted seaweeds. The degenerate seaweeds show a limited fractal
scaling range and, with increased undercooling, suggests a transition from
"fractal" to "compact" seaweed. Strongly tilted seaweeds demonstrate a
significant twofold anisotropy. In addition, seaweed-dendrite transitions are
observed in low anisotropy growth.Comment: 12 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. E, reduced image
quality for smaller file siz
Competition and bistability of ordered undulations and undulation chaos in inclined layer convection
Experimental and theoretical investigations of undulation patterns in
high-pressure, inclined layer gas convection at a Prandtl number near unity are
reported. Particular focus is given to the competition between the
spatiotemporal chaotic state of undulation chaos and stationary patterns of
ordered undulations. In experiments a competition and bistability between the
two states is observed, with ordered undulations most prevalent at higher
Rayleigh number. The spectral pattern entropy, spatial correlation lengths, and
defect statistics are used to characterize the competing states. The
experiments are complemented by a theoretical analysis of the
Oberbeck-Boussinesq equations. The stability region of the ordered undulation
as a function of their wavevectors and the Rayleigh number is obtained with
Galerkin techniques. In addition, direct numerical simulations are used to
investigate the spatiotemporal dynamics. In the simulations both ordered
undulations and undulation chaos were observed dependent on initial conditions.
Experiment and theory are found to agree well.Comment: Reduced-resolution figure
Statistics of defect motion in spatiotemporal chaos in inclined layer convection
We report experiments on defect-tracking in the state of undulation chaos
observed in thermal convection of an inclined fluid layer. We characterize the
ensemble of defect trajectories according to their velocities, relative
positions, diffusion, and gain and loss rates. In particular, the defects
exhibit incidents of rapid transverse motion which result in power law
distributions for a number of quantitative measures. We examine connections
between this behavior and L\'evy flights and anomalous diffusion. In addition,
we describe time-reversal and system size invariance for defect creation and
annihilation rates.Comment: (21 pages, 17 figures
Azimuthal diffusion of the large-scale-circulation plane, and absence of significant non-Boussinesq effects, in turbulent convection near the ultimate-state transition
We present measurements of the orientation and temperature
amplitude of the large-scale circulation in a cylindrical sample of
turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection (RBC) with aspect ratio ( and are the diameter and height respectively) and for the
Prandtl number . Results for revealed a preferred
orientation with upflow in the West, consistent with a broken azimuthal
invariance due to Earth's Coriolis force [see \cite{BA06b}]. They yielded the
azimuthal diffusivity and a corresponding Reynolds number
for Rayleigh numbers over the range . In the classical state () the results
were consistent with the measurements by \cite{BA06a} for and
which gave , and with the
Prandtl-number dependence as found previously
also for the velocity-fluctuation Reynolds number \cite[]{HGBA15b}. At
larger the data for revealed a transition to a new
state, known as the "ultimate" state, which was first seen in the Nusselt
number and in at and
. In the ultimate state we found .
Recently \cite{SU15} claimed that non-Oberbeck-Boussinesq effects on the
Nusselt and Reynolds numbers of turbulent RBC may have been interpreted
erroneously as a transition to a new state. We demonstrate that their reasoning
is incorrect and that the transition observed in the G\"ottingen experiments
and discussed in the present paper is indeed to a new state of RBC referred to
as "ultimate".Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be pub. in JFM
Lagrangian view of time irreversibility of fluid turbulence
A turbulent flow is maintained by an external supply of kinetic energy, which
is eventually dissipated into heat at steep velocity gradients. The scale at
which energy is supplied greatly differs from the scale at which energy is
dissipated, the more so as the turbulent intensity (the Reynolds number) is
larger. The resulting energy flux over the range of scales, intermediate
between energy injection and dissipation, acts as a source of time
irreversibility. As it is now possible to follow accurately fluid particles in
a turbulent flow field, both from laboratory experiments and from numerical
simulations, a natural question arises: how do we detect time irreversibility
from these Lagrangian data? Here we discuss recent results concerning this
problem. For Lagrangian statistics involving more than one fluid particle, the
distance between fluid particles introduces an intrinsic length scale into the
problem. The evolution of quantities dependent on the relative motion between
these fluid particles, including the kinetic energy in the relative motion, or
the configuration of an initially isotropic structure can be related to the
equal-time correlation functions of the velocity field, and is therefore
sensitive to the energy flux through scales, hence to the irreversibility of
the flow. In contrast, for single-particle Lagrangian statistics, the most
often studied velocity structure functions cannot distinguish the "arrow of
time." Recent observations from experimental and numerical simulation data,
however, show that the change of kinetic energy following the particle motion,
is sensitive to time-reversal. We end the survey with a brief discussion of the
implication of this line of work.Comment: accepted for publication in Science China - Physics, Mechanics &
Astronom
Logarithmic temperature profiles of turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in the classical and ultimate state for a Prandtl number of 0.8
We report on experimental determinations of the temperature field in the
interior (bulk) of turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection for a cylindrical
sample with aspect ratio (diameter over height) of 0.50, both in the classical
and in the ultimate state. The Prandtl number was close to 0.8. We find a
"logarithmic layer" in which the temperature varies as A*ln(z/L) + B with the
distance z from the bottom plate of the sample. The amplitude A varies with
radial position r. In the classical state these results are in good agreement
with direct numerical simulations (DNS); in the ultimate state there are as yet
no DNS. A close analogy between the temperature field in the classical state
and the "Law of the Wall" for the time-averaged down-stream velocity in shear
flow is discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figure
Inertial effects on two-particle relative dispersion in turbulent flows
We report experimental results on the relative motion of pairs of solid
spheric particles with initial separations in the inertial range of fully
developed turbulence in water. The particle densities were in the range of , \textit{i.e.}, from neutrally
buoyant to highly inertial; and their sizes were of the Kolmogorov scale. For
all particles, we observed a Batchelor like regime, in which particles
separated ballistically. Similar to the Batchelor regime for tracers, this
regime was observed in the early stages of the relative separation for times with determined by the turbulence energy dissipation
rate and the initial separation between particle pairs. In this time interval
heavier particles separated faster than fluid tracers. The second order
Eulerian velocity structure functions was found to increase with density. In
other words, both observations show that the relative velocity between inertial
particles was larger than that between tracers. Based on the widely used,
simplified equation of motion for inertial point-particles, we derived a model
that shows an increase in relative velocity between inertial particles. In its
scale dependence, however, it disagrees quantitatively with the experimental
results. This we attribute to the preferential sampling of the flow field by
inertial particles, which is not captured by the model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, epl2.cls, submitted to EP
Pattern formation in inclined layer convection
We report experiments on thermally driven convection in an inclined layer of
large aspect ratio in a fluid of Prandtl number . We observed
a number of new nonlinear, mostly spatio-temporally chaotic, states. At small
angles of inclination we found longitudinal rolls, subharmonic oscillations,
Busse oscillations, undulation chaos, and crawling rolls. At larger angles, in
the vicinity of the transition from buoyancy- to shear-driven instability, we
observed drifting transverse rolls, localized bursts, and drifting bimodals.
For angles past vertical, when heated from above, we found drifting transverse
rolls and switching diamond panes.Comment: For MPEG movies, see http://milou.msc.cornell.edu/ILCmovie
On the Swimming of \textit{Dictyostelium} amoebae
Traditionally, the primary mode for locomotion of amoeboid cells was thought
to be crawling on a substrate. Recently, it has been experimentally shown that
\textit{Dictostelium} amoeba and neutrophils can also swim in a directed
fashion. The mechanisms for amoeboid crawling and swimming were hypothesized to
be similar. In this letter, we show that the shape changes generated by a
crawling \textit{D. discoideum} cell are consistent with swimming.Comment: letter submitted to PNA
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