3,565 research outputs found

    Control and monitoring of the ARGO-YBJ detector

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    Suppression of von K\'arm\'an vortex streets past porous rectangular cylinders

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    Although the stability properties of the wake past impervious bluff bodies have been widely examined in the literature, similar analyses regarding the flow around and through porous ones are still lacking. In this work, the effect of the porosity and permeability on the wake patterns of porous rectangular cylinders is numerically investigated at low to moderate Reynolds numbers in the framework of direct numerical simulation combined with local and global stability analyses. A modified Darcy-Brinkman formulation is employed here so as to describe the flow behavior inside the porous media, where also the convective terms are retained to correctly account for the inertial effects at high values of permeability. Different aspect ratios of the cylinder are considered, varying the thickness-to-height ratios, t/d, from 0.01 (flat plate) to 1.0 (square cylinder). The results show that the permeability of the bodies has a strong effect in modifying the characteristics of the wakes and of the associated flow instabilities, while the porosity weakly affects the resulting flow patterns. In particular, the fluid flows through the porous bodies and, thus, as the permeability is progressively increased, the recirculation regions, initially attached to the rear part of the bodies, at first detach from the body and, eventually, disappear even in the near wakes. Global stability analyses lead to the identification of critical values of the permeability above which any linear instability is prevented. Moreover, a different scaling of the non-dimensional permeability allows to identify a general threshold for all the configurations here studied that ensures the suppression of vortex shedding, at least in the considered parameter space.Comment: 31 pages and 17 figure

    Flow control design inspired by linear stability analysis

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    In the recent literature, a growing number of research papers have been dedicated to applying the techniques of global stability and sensitivity analysis to the design of flow controls. The controls that are designed in this way are mainly passive or open-loop controls. Among those, we consider here controls that are aimed at linearly stabilizing flow configurations which would be otherwise globally unstable. In particular, a review of the literature on flow controls designed on the basis of stability and sensitivity analysis is presented. The mentioned methods can be rigorously applied to relatively simple flow regimes, typically observed at low values of the Reynolds number. In this respect, the recent literature also demonstrates a large interest in the application of the same methods for the control of coherent large-scale flow structures in turbulent flows, as, for instance, the quasiperiodic shedding of vortices in turbulent wakes. The papers dedicated to this subject are also reviewed here. Finally, all the described methods imply the solution of eigenvalue problems which are at the state-of-the-art for computational complexity. On the one hand, there are attempts to reduce the complexity of the involved computational problems by applying local stability analysis, and some examples are illustrated. On the other hand, recent advances in numerical methods, also concisely reviewed here, allow the manipulation of large eigenvalue problems and greatly simplify the development of numerical tools for stability and sensitivity analysis of complex flow models, often built using existing fluid dynamics codes

    Weak convergence of random p-mappings and the exploration process of inhomogeneous continuum random trees

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    We study the asymptotics of the pp-mapping model of random mappings on [n][n] as nn gets large, under a large class of asymptotic regimes for the underlying distribution pp. We encode these random mappings in random walks which are shown to converge to a functional of the exploration process of inhomogeneous random trees, this exploration process being derived (Aldous-Miermont-Pitman 2003) from a bridge with exchangeable increments. Our setting generalizes previous results by allowing a finite number of ``attracting points'' to emerge.Comment: 16 page

    Ultra long-lived particles searches with MATHUSLA

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    A non-linear observer for unsteady three-dimensional flows

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    A method is proposed to estimate the velocity field of an unsteady flow using a limited number of flow measurements. The method is based on a non-linear low-dimensional model of the flow and on expanding the velocity field in terms of empirical basis functions. The main idea is to impose that the coefficients of the modal expansion of the velocity field give the best approximation to the available measurements and that at the same time they satisfy as close as possible the non-linear low-order model. The practical use may range from feedback flow control to monitoring of the flow in non-accessible regions. The proposed technique is applied to the flow around a confined square cylinder, both in two- and three-dimensional laminar flow regimes. Comparisons are provided. with existing linear and non-linear estimation techniques

    Effects of base-flow variations on the secondary instability in the wake of a circular cylinder

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    L'abstract si trova nella sezione S1-3

    Investigation of the symmetry-breaking instability in a T-mixer with circular cross section

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    This paper investigates the laminar flow inside a T-mixer composed of three pipes with a circular cross section. The flow enters the mixer symmetrically from the two aligned pipes and leaves the device from the third pipe. In similar devices, but involving rectangular channels instead of pipes, an important regime for mixing has been identified, denoted as engulfment. Despite the symmetries of the flow and of the geometry, engulfment is an asymmetric steady regime, which is observed above a critical value (Rec) of the flow Reynolds number. Conversely, for Reynolds numbers lower than Rec, the flow regime is steady and symmetric, and it is usually denoted as the vortex regime. In this paper, both the vortex and the engulfment regimes are identified for the considered geometry, and they are characterized in detail by dedicated direct numerical simulations (DNSs). Despite an apparent similitude with the behavior of T-mixers employing rectangular channels, which are the most investigated T-mixers in the literature, substantial differences are observed and highlighted here concerning both regimes, i.e., the vortex and the engulfment ones, and concerning transition between the two. Global stability analysis is finally used in synergy with DNS to investigate the onset of the engulfment regime, which is shown to be related to a symmetry-breaking bifurcation of the vortex regime

    T-mixer operating with water at different temperatures: Simulation and stability analysis

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    In this paper we investigate the transition from the vortex to the engulfment regime in a T-mixer when the two entering flows have different viscosity. In particular we consider as working fluid water entering the two inlet channels of the mixer at two different temperatures. Contrary to the isothermal case, at low Reynolds numbers the vortex regime shows only a single reflectional symmetry, due to the nonhomogeneous distribution of the viscosity. Increasing the Reynolds number, a symmetry-breaking bifurcation drives the system to a new steady flow configuration, usually called the engulfment regime, similar to what it is possible to observe in an isothermal case. This flow regime is associated with an increase of the mixing between the two inlet streams. It is shown by direct numerical simulation (DNS) and by stability analysis that the engulfment regime is promoted by the temperature difference. Starting from the DNSs, the resulting flow fields are analyzed in detail considering different temperature jumps between the two inlet boundaries. Furthermore, dedicated linear stability analyses are carried out to investigate the instability mechanism associated with the occurrence of the engulfment regime. In particular, similarly to the case without temperature differences, the onset of engulfment is driven by the momentum equation, and the temperature field does not lead to any additional instability mechanism. However, the existence of a temperature field leads to quantitative changes of the stability characteristics and of the resulting flow fields via a variation of the viscosity coefficient

    Investigation of the steady engulfment regime in a three-dimensional T-mixer

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    The steady engulfment regime in a fully three-dimensional micro T-mixer is investigated. This regime is of significant interest for applications since it implies high mixing between the flow streams entering the device. Direct numerical simulations are first used to characterize this regime. In particular, the main vortical structures typical of the engulfment regime and their effects on mixing are investigated. Three-dimensional linear stability analysis is successively applied to the characterization of the instability leading to the engulfment regime. The critical Reynolds number and the global unstable mode are first computed for a configuration characterized by fully-developed inlet velocity conditions. The sensitivity of this instability to a generic modification of the base flow is then investigated, thanks to the computation of the mode adjoint to the direct unstable one. Finally, this kind of analysis is specialized to investigate the effect of a perturbation of the velocity distribution at the inlet of the T-mixer. Sensitivity analysis shows that non-fully developed inlet velocity conditions lead to an increase of the critical Reynolds number. More generally, the sensitivity maps can be used for the design of control strategies aimed at promoting or inhibiting the engulfment. An example is provided for a control based on blowing/suction through the mixer walls
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