9,124 research outputs found
Three-dimensionality in quasi-two dimensional flows: recirculations and barrel effects
A scenario is put forward for the appearance of three-dimensionality both in
quasi-2D rotating flows and quasi-2D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) flows. We show
that 3D recirculating flows and currents originate in wall boundary layers and
that, unlike in ordinary hydrodynamic flows, they cannot be ignited by
confinement alone. They also induce a second form of three-dimensionality with
quadratic variations of velocities and current across the channel. This
scenario explains both the common tendency of these flows to two-dimensionality
and the mechanisms of the recirculations through a single formal analogy
covering a wide class of flow including rotating and MHD flows. These
trans-disciplinary effects are thus active in atmospheres, oceans or the
cooling blankets of nuclear fusion reactors.Comment: 6 pages, 1 Figur
Enhanced transmission of slit arrays in an extremely thin metallic film
Horizontal resonances of slit arrays are studied. They can lead to an
enhanced transmission that cannot be explained using the single-mode
approximation. A new type of cavity resonance is found when the slits are
narrow for a wavelength very close to the period. It can be excited for very
low thicknesses. Optimization shows these structures could constitute
interesting monochromatic filters
Trailing Edge Noise Reduction by Passive and Active Flow Controls
This paper presents the results on the use of porous metal foams (passive control) and dielectric barrier surface plasma actuations (active control) for the reduction of vortex shedding tonal noises from the nonflat plate type trailing edge serration in a NACA0012 airfoil previously discussed in Chong et al. (AIAA J. Vol. 51, 2013, pp. 2665-2677). The use of porous metal foams to fill the interstices between adjacent members of the sawtooth can almost completely suppress the vortex shedding tonal noise, whilst the serration effect on the broadband noise reduction is retained. This concept will promote the nonflat plate type serrated trailing edge to become a genuine alternative to the conventional flat plate type serrated trailing edge, which is known to have drawbacks in the structural stability, aerodynamic performances and implementation issues. For the plasma actuators, configuration which produces electric wind in a tangential direction is found to be not very effective in suppressing the vortices emanated from the serration blunt root. On the other hand, for the plasma configuration which produces electric wind in a vertical direction, good level of vortex shedding tonal noise reduction has been demonstrated. However, the self noise produced by the plasma actuators negates the noise benefits on the tonal noise reduction. This characteristic illustrates the need to further develop the plasma actuators in a two pronged approach. First is to increase the electric wind speed, thereby allowing the plasma actuators to be used in a higher free jet velocity which naturally produces a larger level of jet noise. Second, the self noise radiated by the plasma actuators should be reduced
Indeterminacy, Memory, and Motion in a Simple Granular Packing
We apply two theoretical and two numerical methods to the problem of a disk
placed in a groove and subjected to gravity and a torque. Methods assuming
rigid particles are indeterminate -- certain combinations of forces cannot be
calculated, but only constrained by inequalities. In methods assuming
deformable particles, these combinations of forces are determined by the
history of the packing. Thus indeterminacy in rigid particles becomes memory in
deformable ones. Furthermore, the torque needed to rotate the particle was
calculated. Two different paths to motion were identified. In the first,
contact forces change slowly, and the indeterminacy decreases continuously to
zero, and vanishes precisely at the onset of motion, and the torque needed to
rotate the disk is independent of method and packing history. In the second
way, this torque depends on method and on the history of the packing, and the
forces jump discontinuously at the onset of motion.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
Stress-strain behavior and geometrical properties of packings of elongated particles
We present a numerical analysis of the effect of particle elongation on the
quasistatic behavior of sheared granular media by means of the Contact Dynamics
method. The particle shapes are rounded-cap rectangles characterized by their
elongation. The macroscopic and microstructural properties of several packings
subjected to biaxial compression are analyzed as a function of particle
elongation. We find that the shear strength is an increasing linear function of
elongation. Performing an additive decomposition of the stress tensor based on
a harmonic approximation of the angular dependence of branch vectors, contact
normals and forces, we show that the increasing mobilization of friction force
and the associated anisotropy are key effects of particle elongation. These
effects are correlated with partial nematic ordering of the particles which
tend to be oriented perpendicular to the major principal stress direction and
form side-to-side contacts. However, the force transmission is found to be
mainly guided by cap-to-side contacts, which represent the largest fraction of
contacts for the most elongated particles. Another interesting finding is that,
in contrast to shear strength, the solid fraction first increases with particle
elongation, but declines as the particles become more elongated. It is also
remarkable that the coordination number does not follow this trend so that the
packings of more elongated particles are looser but more strongly connected.Comment: Submited to Physical Review
Prospecting Period Measurements with LSST - Low Mass X-ray Binaries as a Test Case
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will provide for unbiased sampling
of variability properties of objects with mag 24. This should allow for
those objects whose variations reveal their orbital periods (), such
as low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) and related objects, to be examined in much
greater detail and with uniform systematic sampling. However, the baseline LSST
observing strategy has temporal sampling that is not optimised for such work in
the Galaxy. Here we assess four candidate observing strategies for measurement
of in the range 10 minutes to 50 days. We simulate multi-filter
quiescent LMXB lightcurves including ellipsoidal modulation and stochastic
flaring, and then sample these using LSST's operations simulator (OpSim) over
the (mag, ) parameter space, and over five sightlines sampling a range
of possible reddening values. The percentage of simulated parameter space with
correctly returned periods ranges from 23 %, for the current baseline
strategy, to 70 % for the two simulated specialist strategies. Convolving
these results with a distribution, a modelled Galactic spatial
distribution and reddening maps, we conservatively estimate that the most
recent version of the LSST baseline strategy will allow determination
for 18 % of the Milky Way's LMXB population, whereas strategies that do
not reduce observations of the Galactic Plane can improve this dramatically to
32 %. This increase would allow characterisation of the full binary
population by breaking degeneracies between suggested distributions
in the literature. Our results can be used in the ongoing assessment of the
effectiveness of various potential cadencing strategies.Comment: Replacement after addressing minor corrections from the referee -
mainly improvements in clarificatio
Fish evacuate smoothly respecting a social bubble
Crowd movements are observed among different species and on different scales,
from insects to mammals, as well as in non-cognitive systems, such as motile
cells. When forced to escape through a narrow opening, most terrestrial animals
behave like granular materials and clogging events decrease the efficiency of
the evacuation. Here, we explore the evacuation behavior of macroscopic,
aquatic agents, neon fish, and challenge their gregarious behavior by forcing
the school through a constricted passage. Using a statistical analysis method
developed for granular matter and applied to crowd evacuation, our results
clearly show that, unlike crowds of people or herds of sheep, no clogging
occurs at the bottleneck. The fish do not collide and wait for a minimum
waiting time between two successive exits, while respecting a social distance.
When the constriction becomes similar to or smaller than their social distance,
the individual domains defined by this cognitive distance are deformed and fish
density increases. We show that the current of escaping fish behaves like a set
of deformable 2D-bubbles, their 2D domain, passing through a constriction.
Schools of fish show that, by respecting social rules, a crowd of individuals
can evacuate without clogging, even in an emergency situation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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