124 research outputs found
Effect of weak fluid inertia upon Jeffery orbits
We consider the rotation of small neutrally buoyant axisymmetric particles in
a viscous steady shear flow. When inertial effects are negligible the problem
exhibits infinitely many periodic solutions, the "Jeffery orbits". We compute
how inertial effects lift their degeneracy by perturbatively solving the
coupled particle-flow equations. We obtain an equation of motion valid at small
shear Reynolds numbers, for spheroidal particles with arbitrary aspect ratios.
We analyse how the linear stability of the \lq log-rolling\rq{} orbit depends
on particle shape and find it to be unstable for prolate spheroids. This
resolves a puzzle in the interpretation of direct numerical simulations of the
problem. In general both unsteady and non-linear terms in the Navier-Stokes
equations are important.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Super-diffusion around the rigidity transition: Levy and the Lilliputians
By analyzing the displacement statistics of an assembly of horizontally
vibrated bidisperse frictional grains in the vicinity of the jamming transition
experimentally studied before, we establish that their superdiffusive motion is
a genuine Levy flight, but with `jump' size very small compared to the diameter
of the grains. The vibration induces a broad distribution of jumps that are
random in time, but correlated in space, and that can be interpreted as
micro-crack events at all scales. As the volume fraction departs from the
critical jamming density, this distribution is truncated at a smaller and
smaller jump size, inducing a crossover towards standard diffusive motion at
long times. This interpretation contrasts with the idea of temporally
persistent, spatially correlated currents and raises new issues regarding the
analysis of the dynamics in terms of vibrational modes.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Rotation of a spheroid in a simple shear at small Reynolds number
We derive an effective equation of motion for the orientational dynamics of a
neutrally buoyant spheroid suspended in a simple shear flow, valid for
arbitrary particle aspect ratios and to linear order in the shear Reynolds
number. We show how inertial effects lift the degeneracy of the Jeffery orbits
and determine the stabilities of the log-rolling and tumbling orbits at
infinitesimal shear Reynolds numbers. For prolate spheroids we find stable
tumbling in the shear plane, log-rolling is unstable. For oblate particles, by
contrast, log-rolling is stable and tumbling is unstable provided that the
aspect ratio is larger than a critical value. When the aspect ratio is smaller
than this value tumbling turns stable, and an unstable limit cycle is born.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
The role of inertia for the rotation of a nearly spherical particle in a general linear flow
We analyse the angular dynamics of a neutrally buoyant nearly spherical
particle immersed in a steady general linear flow. The hydrodynamic torque
acting on the particle is obtained by means of a reciprocal theorem, regular
perturbation theory exploiting the small eccentricity of the nearly spherical
particle, and assuming that inertial effects are small, but finite.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Avalanches and Dynamical Correlations in supercooled liquids
We identify the pattern of microscopic dynamical relaxation for a two
dimensional glass forming liquid. On short timescales, bursts of irreversible
particle motion, called cage jumps, aggregate into clusters. On larger time
scales, clusters aggregate both spatially and temporally into avalanches. This
propagation of mobility, or dynamic facilitation, takes place along the soft
regions of the systems, which have been identified by computing
isoconfigurational Debye-Waller maps. Our results characterize the way in which
dynamical heterogeneity evolves in moderately supercooled liquids and reveal
that it is astonishingly similar to the one found for dense glassy granular
media.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Inertial torque on a squirmer
A small spheroid settling in a quiescent fluid experiences an inertial torque
that aligns it so that it settles with its broad side first. Here we show that
an active particle experiences such a torque too, as it settles in a fluid at
rest. For a spherical squirmer, the torque is
where is the swimming velocity,
is the settling velocity in the Stokes approximation,
and is the equivalent fluid mass. This torque aligns the swimming
direction against gravity: swimming up is stable, swimming down is unstable.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Field induced stationary state for an accelerated tracer in a bath
Our interest goes to the behavior of a tracer particle, accelerated by a
constant and uniform external field, when the energy injected by the field is
redistributed through collision to a bath of unaccelerated particles. A non
equilibrium steady state is thereby reached. Solutions of a generalized
Boltzmann-Lorentz equation are analyzed analytically, in a versatile framework
that embeds the majority of tracer-bath interactions discussed in the
literature. These results --mostly derived for a one dimensional system-- are
successfully confronted to those of three independent numerical simulation
methods: a direct iterative solution, Gillespie algorithm, and the Direct
Simulation Monte Carlo technique. We work out the diffusion properties as well
as the velocity tails: large v, and either large -v, or v in the vicinity of
its lower cutoff whenever the velocity distribution is bounded from below.
Particular emphasis is put on the cold bath limit, with scatterers at rest,
which plays a special role in our model.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures v3:minor corrections in sec.III and added
reference
Dynamics of an Intruder in Dense Granular Fluids
We investigate the dynamics of an intruder pulled by a constant force in a
dense two-dimensional granular fluid by means of event-driven molecular
dynamics simulations. In a first step, we show how a propagating momentum front
develops and compactifies the system when reflected by the boundaries. To be
closer to recent experiments \cite{candelier2010journey,candelier2009creep}, we
then add a frictional force acting on each particle, proportional to the
particle's velocity. We show how to implement frictional motion in an
event-driven simulation. This allows us to carry out extensive numerical
simulations aiming at the dependence of the intruder's velocity on packing
fraction and pulling force. We identify a linear relation for small and a
nonlinear regime for high pulling forces and investigate the dependence of
these regimes on granular temperature
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