12 research outputs found
Validating the FLASH Code: Vortex-Dominated Flows
As a component of the Flash Center's validation program, we compare FLASH
simulation results with experimental results from Los Alamos National
Laboratory. The flow of interest involves the lateral interaction between a
planar Ma=1.2 shock wave with a cylinder of gaseous sulfur hexafluoride (SF_6)
in air, and in particular the development of primary and secondary
instabilities after the passage of the shock. While the overall evolution of
the flow is comparable in the simulations and experiments, small-scale features
are difficult to match. We focus on the sensitivity of numerical results to
simulation parameters.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, presented at the 5th International Conference on
High Energy Laboratory Astrophysics, Tucson, AZ, March 10-13, 200
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Effects of numerical methods on comparisons between experiments and simulations of shock-accelerated mixing.
We consider the detailed structures of mixing flows for Richtmyer-Meshkov experiments of Prestridge et al. [PRE 00] and Tomkins et al. [TOM 01] and examine the most recent measurements from the experimental apparatus. Numerical simulations of these experiments are performed with three different versions of high resolution finite volume Godunov methods. We compare experimental data with simulations for configurations of one and two diffuse cylinders of SF{sub 6} in air using integral measures as well as fractal analysis and continuous wavelet transforms. The details of the initial conditions have a significant effect on the computed results, especially in the case of the double cylinder. Additionally, these comparisons reveal sensitive dependence of the computed solution on the numerical method
Passive and Active Stabilization of Liquid Bridges in Low Gravity
Tests are planned in the low gravity environment of the International Space Station (ISS) of new methods for the suppression of the capillary instability of liquid bridges. Our suppression methods are unusual in that they are not limited to liquid bridges having very special properties and may impact a variety of low-gravity and earth-based technologies. There are two main approaches to be investigated: (1) Passive Acoustic Stabilization (PAS); and (2) Active Electrostatic Stabilization (AES). In PAS, the suppression of the mode growth is accomplished by placing the bridge in an acoustic field having the appropriate properties such that the acoustic radiation pressure automatically pulls outward on the thinnest portion of the bridge. In AES, the bridge deformation is sensed optically and counteracted by actively adjusting the electrostatic Maxwell stresses via two ring electrodes concentric with the slightly conducting bridge to offset the growth of the unstable mode. While the present work emphasizes cylindrical bridges, the methods need not be restricted to that case. The methods to be explored are relevant to the suppression of capillary instabilities in floating zone crystal growth, breakup of liquid jets and columns, bubbles, and annular films as well as the management of coolants or propellants in low-gravity