6,061 research outputs found
Analytical shock solutions at large and small Prandtl number
Exact one-dimensional solutions to the equations of fluid dynamics are
derived in the large-Pr and small-Pr limits (where Pr is the Prandtl number).
The solutions are analogous to the Pr = 3/4 solution discovered by Becker and
analytically capture the profile of shock fronts in ideal gases. The large-Pr
solution is very similar to Becker's solution, differing only by a scale
factor. The small-Pr solution is qualitatively different, with an embedded
isothermal shock occurring above a critical Mach number. Solutions are derived
for constant viscosity and conductivity as well as for the case in which
conduction is provided by a radiation field. For a completely general density-
and temperature-dependent viscosity and conductivity, the system of equations
in all three limits can be reduced to quadrature. The maximum error in the
analytical solutions when compared to a numerical integration of the finite-Pr
equations is O(1/Pr) for large Pr and O(Pr) for small Pr.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Journal of Fluid
Mechanics Rapid
Buoyancy instability of homologous implosions
I consider the hydrodynamic stability of imploding gases as a model for
inertial confinement fusion capsules, sonoluminescent bubbles and the
gravitational collapse of astrophysical gases. For oblate modes under a
homologous flow, a monatomic gas is governed by the Schwarzschild criterion for
buoyant stability. Under buoyantly unstable conditions, fluctuations experience
power-law growth in time, with a growth rate that depends upon mean flow
gradients and is independent of mode number. If the flow accelerates throughout
the implosion, oblate modes amplify by a factor (2C)^(|N0| ti)$, where C is the
convergence ratio of the implosion, N0 is the initial buoyancy frequency and ti
is the implosion time scale. If, instead, the implosion consists of a coasting
phase followed by stagnation, oblate modes amplify by a factor exp(pi |N0| ts),
where N0 is the buoyancy frequency at stagnation and ts is the stagnation time
scale. Even under stable conditions, vorticity fluctuations grow due to the
conservation of angular momentum as the gas is compressed. For non-monatomic
gases, this results in weak oscillatory growth under conditions that would
otherwise be buoyantly stable; this over-stability is consistent with the
conservation of wave action in the fluid frame. By evolving the complete set of
linear equations, it is demonstrated that oblate modes are the fastest-growing
modes and that high mode numbers are required to reach this limit (Legendre
mode l > 100 for spherical flows). Finally, comparisons are made with a
Lagrangian hydrodynamics code, and it is found that a numerical resolution of
~30 zones per wavelength is required to capture these solutions accurately.
This translates to an angular resolution of ~(12/l) degrees, or < 0.1 degree to
resolve the fastest-growing modes.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the Journal of Fluid
Mechanics Rapid
Closed-form shock solutions
It is shown here that a subset of the implicit analytical shock solutions
discovered by Becker and by Johnson can be inverted, yielding several exact
closed-form solutions of the one-dimensional compressible Navier-Stokes
equations for an ideal gas. For a constant dynamic viscosity and thermal
conductivity, and at particular values of the shock Mach number, the velocity
can be expressed in terms of a polynomial root. For a constant kinematic
viscosity, independent of Mach number, the velocity can be expressed in terms
of a hyperbolic tangent function. The remaining fluid variables are related to
the velocity through simple algebraic expressions. The solutions derived here
make excellent verification tests for numerical algorithms, since no source
terms in the evolution equations are approximated, and the closed-form
expressions are straightforward to implement. The solutions are also of some
academic interest as they may provide insight into the non-linear character of
the Navier-Stokes equations and may stimulate further analytical developments.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in the Journal of Fluid
Mechanics Rapid
“Two Wars and the Long Twentieth Century:” A Response
Drew Gilpin Faust, president of Harvard University and renowned historian of the American Civil War, authored an article in the New Yorker recently entitled “Two Wars and the Long Twentieth Century.” Taken primarily from her remarks in the Rede Lecture delivered at the University of Cambridge earlier in 2015, Faust’s article takes advantage of the proximity of the anniversaries of the First World War and the American Civil War to advocate for a dialogue of greater continuity between the two conflicts. [excerpt
Simple Waves in Ideal Radiation Hydrodynamics
In the dynamic diffusion limit of radiation hydrodynamics, advection
dominates diffusion; the latter primarily affects small scales and has
negligible impact on the large scale flow. The radiation can thus be accurately
regarded as an ideal fluid, i.e., radiative diffusion can be neglected along
with other forms of dissipation. This viewpoint is applied here to an analysis
of simple waves in an ideal radiating fluid. It is shown that much of the
hydrodynamic analysis carries over by simply replacing the material sound
speed, pressure and index with the values appropriate for a radiating fluid. A
complete analysis is performed for a centered rarefaction wave, and expressions
are provided for the Riemann invariants and characteristic curves of the
one-dimensional system of equations. The analytical solution is checked for
consistency against a finite difference numerical integration, and the validity
of neglecting the diffusion operator is demonstrated. An interesting physical
result is that for a material component with a large number of internal degrees
of freedom and an internal energy greater than that of the radiation, the sound
speed increases as the fluid is rarefied. These solutions are an excellent test
for radiation hydrodynamic codes operating in the dynamic diffusion regime. The
general approach may be useful in the development of Godunov numerical schemes
for radiation hydrodynamics.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Statistical Mechanics of 2+1 Gravity From Riemann Zeta Function and Alexander Polynomial:Exact Results
In the recent publication (Journal of Geometry and Physics,33(2000)23-102) we
demonstrated that dynamics of 2+1 gravity can be described in terms of train
tracks. Train tracks were introduced by Thurston in connection with description
of dynamics of surface automorphisms. In this work we provide an example of
utilization of general formalism developed earlier. The complete exact solution
of the model problem describing equilibrium dynamics of train tracks on the
punctured torus is obtained. Being guided by similarities between the dynamics
of 2d liquid crystals and 2+1 gravity the partition function for gravity is
mapped into that for the Farey spin chain. The Farey spin chain partition
function, fortunately, is known exactly and has been thoroughly investigated
recently. Accordingly, the transition between the pseudo-Anosov and the
periodic dynamic regime (in Thurston's terminology) in the case of gravity is
being reinterpreted in terms of phase transitions in the Farey spin chain whose
partition function is just a ratio of two Riemann zeta functions. The mapping
into the spin chain is facilitated by recognition of a special role of the
Alexander polynomial for knots/links in study of dynamics of self
homeomorphisms of surfaces. At the end of paper, using some facts from the
theory of arithmetic hyperbolic 3-manifolds (initiated by Bianchi in 1892), we
develop systematic extension of the obtained results to noncompact Riemannian
surfaces of higher genus. Some of the obtained results are also useful for 3+1
gravity. In particular, using the theorem of Margulis, we provide new reasons
for the black hole existence in the Universe: black holes make our Universe
arithmetic. That is the discrete Lie groups of motion are arithmetic.Comment: 69 pages,11 figures. Journal of Geometry and Physics (in press
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