5,425 research outputs found
Non-Oberbeck-Boussinesq effects in two-dimensional Rayleigh-Benard convection in glycerol
We numerically analyze Non-Oberbeck-Boussinesq (NOB) effects in
two-dimensional Rayleigh-Benard flow in glycerol, which shows a dramatic change
in the viscosity with temperature. The results are presented both as functions
of the Rayleigh number (Ra) up to (for fixed temperature difference
between the top and bottom plates) and as functions of
"non-Oberbeck-Boussinesqness'' or "NOBness'' () up to 50 K (for fixed
Ra). For this large NOBness the center temperature is more than 5 K
larger than the arithmetic mean temperature between top and bottom plate
and only weakly depends on Ra. To physically account for the NOB deviations of
the Nusselt numbers from its Oberbeck-Boussinesq values, we apply the
decomposition of into the product of two effects, namely
first the change in the sum of the top and bottom thermal BL thicknesses, and
second the shift of the center temperature as compared to . While
for water the origin of the deviation is totally dominated by the second
effect (cf. Ahlers et al., J. Fluid Mech. 569, pp. 409 (2006)) for glycerol the
first effect is dominating, in spite of the large increase of as compared
to .Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Gas Enrichment at Liquid-Wall Interfaces
Molecular dynamics simulations of Lennard-Jones systems are performed to
study the effects of dissolved gas on liquid-wall and liquid-gas interfaces.
Gas enrichment at walls is observed which for hydrophobic walls can exceed more
than two orders of magnitude when compared to the gas density in the bulk
liquid. As a consequence, the liquid structure close to the wall is
considerably modified, leading to an enhanced wall slip. At liquid-gas
interfaces gas enrichment is found which reduces the surface tension.Comment: main changes compared to version 1: flow simulations are included as
well as different types of gase
Velocity gradients statistics along particle trajectories in turbulent flows: the refined similarity hypothesis in the Lagrangian frame
We present an investigation of the statistics of velocity gradient related
quantities, in particluar energy dissipation rate and enstrophy, along the
trajectories of fluid tracers and of heavy/light particles advected by a
homogeneous and isotropic turbulent flow. The Refined Similarity Hypothesis
(RSH) proposed by Kolmogorov and Oboukhov in 1962 is rephrased in the
Lagrangian context and then tested along the particle trajectories. The study
is performed on state-of-the-art numerical data resulting from numerical
simulations up to Re~400 with 2048^3 collocation points. When particles have
small inertia, we show that the Lagrangian formulation of the RSH is well
verified for time lags larger than the typical response time of the particle.
In contrast, in the large inertia limit when the particle response time
approaches the integral-time-scale of the flow, particles behave nearly
ballistic, and the Eulerian formulation of RSH holds in the inertial-range.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures; Physical Review E (accepted Dec 7, 2009
Apparatus to control and visualize the impact of a high-energy laser pulse on a liquid target
We present an experimental apparatus to control and visualize the response of
a liquid target to a laser-induced vaporization. We use a millimeter-sized drop
as target and present two liquid-dye solutions that allow a variation of the
absorption coefficient of the laser light in the drop by seven orders of
magnitude. The excitation source is a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser at its
frequency-doubled wavelength emitting nanosecond pulses with energy densities
above the local vaporization threshold. The absorption of the laser energy
leads to a large-scale liquid motion at timescales that are separated by
several orders of magnitude, which we spatiotemporally resolve by a combination
of ultra-high-speed and stroboscopic high-resolution imaging in two orthogonal
views. Surprisingly, the large-scale liquid motion at upon laser impact is
completely controlled by the spatial energy distribution obtained by a precise
beam-shaping technique. The apparatus demonstrates the potential for accurate
and quantitative studies of laser-matter interactions.Comment: Submitted to Review of Scientific Instrument
Nuclear Saturation with in-Medium Meson Exchange Interactions
We show that the assumption of dropping meson masses together with
conventional many-body effects, implemented in the relativistic Dirac-Brueckner
formalism, explains nuclear saturation. We use a microscopic model for
correlated exchange and include the standard many-body effects on the
in-medium pion propagation, which initially increase the attractive
nucleon-nucleon () potential with density. For the vector meson exchanges
in both the and sector, we assume Brown-Rho scaling which---in
concert with `chiral' contact interactions---reduces the attraction at
higher densities.Comment: 5 pages REVTeX, 2 eps-figures included, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Spatiotemporal heterogeneity of water flowpaths controls dissolved organic carbon sourcing in a snow-dominated, headwater catchment
The non-uniform distribution of water in snowdrift-driven systems can lead to spatial heterogeneity in vegetative communities and soil development, as snowdrifts may locally increase weathering. The focus of this study is to understand the coupled hydrological and biogeochemical dynamics in a heterogeneous, snowdrift-dominated headwater catchment (Reynolds Mountain East, Reynolds Creek Critical Zone Observatory, Idaho, USA). We determine the sources and fluxes of stream water and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) at this site, deducing likely flowpaths from hydrometric and hydrochemical signals of soil water, saprolite water, and groundwater measured through the snowmelt period and summer recession. We then interpret flowpaths using end-member mixing analysis in light of inferred subsurface structure derived from electrical resistivity and seismic velocity transects. Streamwater is sourced primarily from groundwater (averaging 25% of annual streamflow), snowmelt (50%), and water traveling along the saprolite/bedrock boundary (25%). The latter is comprised of the prior year\u27s soil water, which accumulates DOC in the soil matrix through the summer before flushing to the saprolite during snowmelt. DOC indices suggest that it is sourced from terrestrial carbon, and derives originally from soil organic carbon (SOC) before flushing to the saprolite/bedrock boundary. Multiple subsurface regions in the catchment appear to contribute differentially to streamflow as the season progresses; sources shift from the saprolite/bedrock interface to deeper bedrock aquifers from the snowmelt period into summer. Unlike most studied catchments, lateral flow of soil water during the study year is not a primary source of streamflow. Instead, saprolite and groundwater act as integrators of soil water that flows vertically in this system. Our results do not support the flushing hypothesis as observed in similar systems and instead indicate that temporal variation in connectivity may cause the unexpected dilution behavior displayed by DOC in this catchment
Cavitation and bubble collapse in hot asymmetric nuclear matter
The dynamics of embryonic bubbles in overheated, viscous and non-Markovian
nuclear matter is studied. It is shown that the memory and the Fermi surface
distortions significantly affect the hinderance of bubble collapse and
determine a characteristic oscillations of the bubble radius. These
oscillations occur due to the additional elastic force induced by the memory
integral.Comment: Revtex file (10 pages) and 3 figure
Inertial- and Dissipation-Range Asymptotics in Fluid Turbulence
We propose and verify a wave-vector-space version of generalized extended
self similarity and broaden its applicability to uncover intriguing, universal
scaling in the far dissipation range by computing high-order (\leq 20\/)
structure functions numerically for: (1) the three-dimensional, incompressible
Navier Stokes equation (with and without hyperviscosity); and (2) the GOY shell
model for turbulence. Also, in case (2), with Taylor-microscale Reynolds
numbers 4 \times 10^{4} \leq Re_{\lambda} \leq 3 \times 10^{6}\/, we find
that the inertial-range exponents (\zeta_{p}\/) of the order - p\/
structure functions do not approach their Kolmogorov value p/3\/ as
Re_{\lambda}\/ increases.Comment: RevTeX file, with six postscript figures. epsf.tex macro is used for
figure insertion. Packaged using the 'uufiles' utilit
Developed turbulence: From full simulations to full mode reductions
Developed Navier-Stokes turbulence is simulated with varying wavevector mode
reductions. The flatness and the skewness of the velocity derivative depend on
the degree of mode reduction. They show a crossover towards the value of the
full numerical simulation when the viscous subrange starts to be resolved. The
intermittency corrections of the scaling exponents of the pth order velocity
structure functions seem to depend mainly on the proper resolution of the
inertial subrange. Universal scaling properties (i.e., independent of the
degree of mode reduction) are found for the relative scaling exponents rho
which were recently defined by Benzi et al.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps-figures, replaces version from August 5th, 199
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