50 research outputs found
Nonlinear dynamo action in a precessing cylindrical container
It is numerically demonstrated by means of a magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) code
that precession can trigger the dynamo effect in a cylindrical container. This
result adds credit to the hypothesis that precession can be strong enough to be
one of the sources of the dynamo action in some astrophysical bodies.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures including subfigure
Towards an experimental von Karman dynamo: numerical studies for an optimized design
Numerical studies of a kinematic dynamo based on von Karman type flows
between two counterrotating disks in a finite cylinder are reported. The flow
has been optimized using a water model experiment, varying the driving
impellers configuration. A solution leading to dynamo action for the mean flow
has been found. This solution may be achieved in VKS2, the new sodium
experiment to be performed in Cadarache, France. The optimization process is
described and discussed, then the effects of adding a stationary conducting
layer around the flow on the threshold, on the shape of the neutral mode and on
the magnetic energy balance are studied. Finally, the possible processes
involved into kinematic dynamo action in a von Karman flow are reviewed and
discussed. Among the possible processes we highlight the joint effect of the
boundary-layer radial velocity shear and of the Ohmic dissipation localized at
the flow/outer-shell boundary
Electromagnetic induction in non-uniform domains
Kinematic simulations of the induction equation are carried out for different
setups suitable for the von-K\'arm\'an-Sodium (VKS) dynamo experiment. Material
properties of the flow driving impellers are considered by means of high
conducting and high permeability disks that are present in a cylindrical volume
filled with a conducting fluid. Two entirely different numerical codes are
mutually validated by showing quantitative agreement on Ohmic decay and
kinematic dynamo problems using various configurations and physical parameters.
Field geometry and growth rates are strongly modified by the material
properties of the disks even if the high permeability/high conductivity
material is localized within a quite thin region. In contrast the influence of
external boundary conditions remains small. Utilizing a VKS like mean fluid
flow and high permeability disks yields a reduction of the critical magnetic
Reynolds number for the onset of dynamo action of the simplest non-axisymmetric
field mode. However this decrease is not sufficient to become relevant in the
VKS experiment. Furthermore, the reduction of Rm_c is essentially influenced by
tiny changes in the flow configuration so that the result is not very robust
against small modifications of setup and properties of turbulence
Ambivalent effects of added layers on steady kinematic dynamos in cylindrical geometry: application to the VKS experiment
The intention of the ''von Karman sodium'' (VKS) experiment is to study the
hydromagnetic dynamo effect in a highly turbulent and unconstrained flow. Much
effort has been devoted to the optimization of the mean flow and the lateral
boundary conditions in order to minimize the critical magnetic Reynolds number
and hence the necessary motor power. The main focus of this paper lies on the
role of ''lid layers'', i.e. layers of liquid sodium between the impellers and
the end walls of the cylinder. First, we study an analytical test flow to show
that lid layers can have an ambivalent effect on the efficiency of the dynamo.
The critical magnetic Reynolds number shows a flat minimum for a small lid
layer thickness, but increases for thicker layers. For the actual VKS geometry
it is shown that static lid layers yield a moderate increase of the critical
magnetic Reynolds number by approximately 12 per cent. A more dramatic increase
by 100 until 150 per cent can occur when some rotational flow is taken into
account in those layers. Possible solutions of this problem are discussed for
the real dynamo facility.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, minor changes, to appear in European Journal of
Mechanics B/Fluid
Remarks on the stability of the Navier-Stokes equations supplemented with stress-free boundary conditions
The purpose of this note is to analyze the long term stability of the
Navier-Stokes equations supplemented with the Coriolis force and the
stress-free boundary condition. It is shown that, if the flow domain is
axisymmetric, spurious stability behaviors can occur depending whether the
Coriolis force is active or not
Lagrangian particle paths and ortho-normal quaternion frames
Experimentalists now measure intense rotations of Lagrangian particles in
turbulent flows by tracking their trajectories and Lagrangian-average velocity
gradients at high Reynolds numbers. This paper formulates the dynamics of an
orthonormal frame attached to each Lagrangian fluid particle undergoing
three-axis rotations, by using quaternions in combination with Ertel's theorem
for frozen-in vorticity. The method is applicable to a wide range of Lagrangian
flows including the three-dimensional Euler equations and its variants such as
ideal MHD. The applicability of the quaterionic frame description to Lagrangian
averaged velocity gradient dynamics is also demonstrated.Comment: 9 pages, one figure, revise