2,145 research outputs found
Heat transport by turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection for $\Pra\ \simeq 0.83\times 10^{12} \alt \Ra\ \alt 10^{15}\Gamma = 0.50$
We report experimental results for heat-transport measurements, in the form
of the Nusselt number \Nu, by turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a
cylindrical sample of aspect ratio ( m is
the diameter and m the height). The measurements were made using
sulfur hexafluoride at pressures up to 19 bars as the fluid. They are for the
Rayleigh-number range 3\times 10^{12} \alt \Ra \alt 10^{15} and for Prandtl
numbers \Pra\ between 0.79 and 0.86. For \Ra < \Ra^*_1 \simeq 1.4\times
10^{13} we find \Nu = N_0 \Ra^{\gamma_{eff}} with , consistent with classical turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a
system with laminar boundary layers below the top and above the bottom plate.
For \Ra^*_1 < \Ra < \Ra^*_2 (with \Ra^*_2 \simeq 5\times 10^{14})
gradually increases up to . We argue that above
\Ra^*_2 the system is in the ultimate state of convection where the boundary
layers, both thermal and kinetic, are also turbulent. Several previous
measurements for are re-examined and compared with the present
results.Comment: 44 pages, 18 figures, submitted to NJ
Rayleigh-B\'{e}nard convection in a homeotropically aligned nematic liquid crystal
We report experimental results for convection near onset in a thin layer of a
homeotropically aligned nematic liquid crystal heated from below as a function
of the temperature difference and the applied vertical magnetic
field and compare them with theoretical calculations. The experiments cover
the field range 8 \alt h \equiv H/ H_{F} \alt 80 ( is the
Fr\'eedericksz field). For less than a codimension-two field the bifurcation is subcritical and oscillatory, with travelling- and
standing-wave transients. Beyond the bifurcation is stationary and
subcritical until a tricritical field is reached, beyond which it
is supercritical. The bifurcation sequence as a function of found in the
experiment confirms the qualitative aspects of the theoretical predictions.
However, the value of is about 10% higher than the predicted value and
the results for are systematically below the theory by about 2% at small
and by as much as 7% near . At , is continuous within
the experimental resolution whereas the theory indicates a 7% discontinuity.
The theoretical tricritical field is somewhat below the
experimental one. The fully developed flow above for is
chaotic. For the subcritical stationary bifurcation also
leads to a chaotic state. The chaotic states persist upon reducing the Rayleigh
number below , i.e. the bifurcation is hysteretic. Above the tricritical
field , we find a bifurcation to a time independent pattern which within
our resolution is non-hysteretic.Comment: 15 pages incl. 23 eps figure
A model of diffusion in a potential well for the dynamics of the large-scale circulation in turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection
Experimental measurements of properties of the large-scale circulation (LSC)
in turbulent convection of a fluid heated from below in a cylindrical container
of aspect ratio one are presented and used to test a model of diffusion in a
potential well for the LSC. The model consists of a pair of stochastic ordinary
differential equations motivated by the Navier-Stokes equations. The two
coupled equations are for the azimuthal orientation theta_0, and for the
azimuthal temperature amplitude delta at the horizontal midplane. The dynamics
is due to the driving by Gaussian distributed white noise that is introduced to
represent the action of the small-scale turbulent fluctuations on the
large-scale flow. Measurements of the diffusivities that determine the noise
intensities are reported. Two time scales predicted by the model are found to
be within a factor of two or so of corresponding experimental measurements. A
scaling relationship predicted by the model between delta and the Reynolds
number is confirmed by measurements over a large experimental parameter range.
The Gaussian peaks of probability distributions p(delta) and p(\dot\theta_0)
are accurately described by the model; however the non-Gaussian tails of
p(delta) are not. The frequency, angular change, and amplitude bahavior during
cessations are accurately described by the model when the tails of the
probability distribution of are used as experimental input.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figure
Heat transport by turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection for $\Pra\ \simeq 0.84\times 10^{11} \alt \Ra\ \alt 2\times10^{14}\Gamma = 1.00$
We report experimental results for heat-transport measurements by turbulent
Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a cylindrical sample of aspect ratio ( m is the diameter and m the height).
They are for the Rayleigh-number range 4\times10^{11} \alt \Ra \alt
2\times10^{14} and for Prandtl numbers \Pra\ between 0.79 and 0.86.
For \Ra < \Ra^*_1 \simeq 2\times 10^{13} we find \Nu = N_0
\Ra^{\gamma_{eff}} with and ,
consistent with classical turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a system
with laminar boundary layers below the top and above the bottom plate and with
the prediction of Grossmann and Lohse.
For \Ra > \Ra_1^* the data rise above the classical-state power-law and
show greater scatter. In analogy to similar behavior observed for , we interpret this observation as the onset of the transition to the
ultimate state. Within our resolution this onset occurs at nearly the same
value of \Ra_1^* as it does for . This differs from an earlier
estimate by Roche {\it et al.} which yielded a transition at \Ra_U \simeq
1.3\times 10^{11} \Gamma^{-2.5\pm 0.5}. A -independent \Ra^*_1 would
suggest that the boundary-layer shear transition is induced by fluctuations on
a scale less than the sample dimensions rather than by a global
-dependent flow mode. Within the resolution of the measurements the
heat transport above \Ra_1^* is equal for the two values, suggesting
a universal aspect of the ultimate-state transition and properties. The
enhanced scatter of \Nu\ in the transition region, which exceeds the
experimental resolution, indicates an intrinsic irreproducibility of the state
of the system.Comment: 17 pages, including 2 pages of data tables and 56 references.
Submitted to New J. Phy
Spiral Defect Chaos in Large Aspect Ratio Rayleigh-Benard Convection
We report experiments on convection patterns in a cylindrical cell with a
large aspect ratio. The fluid had a Prandtl number of approximately 1. We
observed a chaotic pattern consisting of many rotating spirals and other
defects in the parameter range where theory predicts that steady straight rolls
should be stable. The correlation length of the pattern decreased rapidly with
increasing control parameter so that the size of a correlated area became much
smaller than the area of the cell. This suggests that the chaotic behavior is
intrinsic to large aspect ratio geometries.Comment: Preprint of experimental paper submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. May 12
1993. Text is preceeded by many TeX macros. Figures 1 and 2 are rather lon
Plume motion and large-scale circulation in a cylindrical Rayleigh-B\'enard cell
We used the time correlation of shadowgraph images to determine the angle
of the horizontal component of the plume velocity above (below) the
center of the bottom (top) plate of a cylindrical Rayleigh-B\'enard cell of
aspect ratio ( is the diameter and mm
the height) in the Rayleigh-number range for a Prandtl number . We expect that gives the
direction of the large-scale circulation. It oscillates time-periodically. Near
the top and bottom plates has the same frequency but is
anti-correlated.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Quantized charge pumping through a quantum dot by surface acoustic waves
We present a realization of quantized charge pumping. A lateral quantum dot
is defined by metallic split gates in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. A surface
acoustic wave whose wavelength is twice the dot length is used to pump single
electrons through the dot at a frequency f=3GHz. The pumped current shows a
regular pattern of quantization at values I=nef over a range of gate voltage
and wave amplitude settings. The observed values of n, the number of electrons
transported per wave cycle, are determined by the number of electronic states
in the quantum dot brought into resonance with the fermi level of the electron
reservoirs during the pumping cycle.Comment: 8 page
Using Simulation to Improve Medical Students' Comfort with Selected Pediatric Procedures
BACKGROUND: Simulation in pediatrics is described often in more procedurally-heavy areas, such as in intensive care, emergency medicine, and neonatology. However, there is a paucity of literature related to simulation in general pediatrics. We sought to improve students’ comfort with and knowledge about selected procedures using simulation mannequins during their pediatric rotation. METHODS: During a workshop, third year medical students received a lecture on male circumcisions, lumbar punctures, the Ortolani and Barlow maneuvers, and ear examinations. Following the lecture, the students were given hands-on instruction and feedback on the techniques for performing ear and hip exams, lumbar punctures, and circumcisions. Students took a pre- and post-encounter assessment regarding their confidence level, procedural knowledge, and perceived usefulness of the training. Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests were used to determine changes in the students’ confidence levels and knowledge. Alpha was set at 0.05 for all comparisons. RESULTS: Sixty medical students (100%) participated in the study during the 2012/2013 academic year. Confidence and knowledge increased significantly on all procedures following the simulation experience (p < 0.001). Perception of usefulness of the training also increased significantly at post-test (p = 0.019). CONCLUSION: Medical students benefited from using simulation to demonstrate and practice common pediatric procedures, both in their confidence and knowledge. The use of simulation for general pediatric procedures should improve patient safety, as well as remove some of the anxiety of performing procedures in actual clinical scenarios
Resistive Anomalies at Ferromagnetic Transitions Revisited: the case of SrRuO_3
We show that recent resistivity data on SrRuO_3 for T->T_c are consistent
with conventional theory when corrections to scaling are included and a small
shift in T_c is allowed.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure; revte
The three-dimensional XY universality class: A high precision Monte Carlo estimate of the universal amplitude ratio A_+/A_-
We simulate the improved three-dimensional two-component phi^4 model on the
simple cubic lattice in the low and the high temperature phase for reduced
temperatures down to |T-T_c|/T_c \approx 0.0017 on lattices of a size up to
350^3. Our new results for the internal energy and the specific heat are
combined with the accurate estimates of beta_c and data for the internal energy
and the specific heat at \beta_c recently obtained in cond-mat/0605083. We find
R_{\alpha} = (1-A_+/A_-)/\alpha = 4.01(5), where alpha is the critical exponent
of the specific heat and A_{\pm} is the amplitude of the specific heat in the
high and the low temperature phase, respectively.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
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