114 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional localized coherent structures of surface turbulence. III Experiment and model validation

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    The paper continues a series of publications devoted to the 3D nonlinear localized coherent structures on the surface of vertically falling liquid films. The work is primarily focussed on experimental investigations. We study: (i) instabilities and transitions leading to 3D coherent structures; (ii) characteristics of these structures. Some nonstationary effects are also studied numerically. Our experimental results, as well as the results of other investigators, are in a good agreement with our theoretical and numerical predictions.Comment: 42 pages, 15 figure

    Linear and Nonlinear Evolution and Diffusion Layer Selection in Electrokinetic Instability

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    In the present work fournontrivial stages of electrokinetic instability are identified by direct numerical simulation (DNS) of the full Nernst-Planck-Poisson-Stokes (NPPS) system: i) The stage of the influence of the initial conditions (milliseconds); ii) 1D self-similar evolution (milliseconds-seconds); iii) The primary instability of the self-similar solution (seconds); iv) The nonlinear stage with secondary instabilities. The self-similar character of evolution at intermediately large times is confirmed. Rubinstein and Zaltzman instability and noise-driven nonlinear evolution to over-limiting regimes in ion-exchange membranes are numerically simulated and compared with theoretical and experimental predictions. The primary instability which happens during this stage is found to arrest self-similar growth of the diffusion layer and specifies its characteristic length as was first experimentally predicted by Yossifon and Chang (PRL 101, 254501 (2008)). A novel principle for the characteristic wave number selection from the broadbanded initial noise is established.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure

    Electric-permittivity-based instability of two dielectric miscible liquids under DC field

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    This paper considers the mixing of two dielectric miscible viscous liquids with different electric permittivities bounded by solid walls in an external electric field normal to the interface of the liquids. The mutual diffusion of these two liquids leads to the formation of an unsteady self-similar 1D diffusion layer. This layer is found to be unstable to the perturbations of the interface. A special sophisticated mathematical approach in self-similar variables is developed to estimate its stability. The results of a linear stability theory are verified by direct numerical simulations of the full nonlinear problem. A mixing efficiency based on the separation amplitude and an optimal electric field strength to achieve the fastest mixing are proposed in the present study

    Instability of a salt jet emitted from a point source in an external electric field

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    The objective in the present work is to consider a simple example of instability of a conducting self-similar micro jet in the external electric field, which represents a prototype of some microfluidic instabilities. Salt from a point source is emitted into its own aquatic solution, which is subject to an external uniform velocity field together with an electrostatic field, and is convected downstream and diffused. The flow is considered in microscales so that, in contrast to the classical jets, the Reynolds numbers are practically zero, but the Péclet numbers are large. The parameters are found at which such a microjet is unstable. Along with the linear stability analysis, we have fulfilled the numerical simulations of the full nonlinear system of equations. The numerical simulation qualitatively confirmed the results of the linear stability and showed that this instability visually reminds classical instabilities of free jets and wakes

    Technical Design Report for the PANDA Solenoid and Dipole Spectrometer Magnets

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    This document is the Technical Design Report covering the two large spectrometer magnets of the PANDA detector set-up. It shows the conceptual design of the magnets and their anticipated performance. It precedes the tender and procurement of the magnets and, hence, is subject to possible modifications arising during this process.Comment: 10 pages, 14MB, accepted by FAIR STI in May 2009, editors: Inti Lehmann (chair), Andrea Bersani, Yuri Lobanov, Jost Luehning, Jerzy Smyrski, Technical Coordiantor: Lars Schmitt, Bernd Lewandowski (deputy), Spokespersons: Ulrich Wiedner, Paola Gianotti (deputy

    Feasibility studies of time-like proton electromagnetic form factors at PANDA at FAIR

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    Simulation results for future measurements of electromagnetic proton form factors at \PANDA (FAIR) within the PandaRoot software framework are reported. The statistical precision with which the proton form factors can be determined is estimated. The signal channel pˉpe+e\bar p p \to e^+ e^- is studied on the basis of two different but consistent procedures. The suppression of the main background channel, i.e.\textit{i.e.} pˉpπ+π\bar p p \to \pi^+ \pi^-, is studied. Furthermore, the background versus signal efficiency, statistical and systematical uncertainties on the extracted proton form factors are evaluated using two different procedures. The results are consistent with those of a previous simulation study using an older, simplified framework. However, a slightly better precision is achieved in the PandaRoot study in a large range of momentum transfer, assuming the nominal beam conditions and detector performance
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