759 research outputs found
Entropy Balance and Dispersive Oscillations in Lattice Boltzmann Models
We conduct an investigation into the dispersive post-shock oscillations in
the entropic lattice-Boltzmann method (ELBM). To this end we use a root finding
algorithm to implement the ELBM which displays fast cubic convergence and
guaranties the proper sign of dissipation. The resulting simulation on the
one-dimensional shock tube shows no benefit in terms of regularization from
using the ELBM over the standard LBGK method. We also conduct an experiment
investigating of the LBGK method using median filtering at a single point per
time step. Here we observe that significant regularization can be achieved.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures; 13/07/2009 Matlab code added to appendi
Spectral singularities and Bragg scattering in complex crystals
Spectral singularities that spoil the completeness of Bloch-Floquet states
may occur in non-Hermitian Hamiltonians with complex periodic potentials. Here
an equivalence is established between spectral singularities in complex
crystals and secularities that arise in Bragg diffraction patterns. Signatures
of spectral singularities in a scattering process with wave packets are
elucidated for a PT-symmetric complex crystal.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
A unified hyperbolic formulation for viscous fluids and elastoplastic solids
We discuss a unified flow theory which in a single system of hyperbolic
partial differential equations (PDEs) can describe the two main branches of
continuum mechanics, fluid dynamics, and solid dynamics. The fundamental
difference from the classical continuum models, such as the Navier-Stokes for
example, is that the finite length scale of the continuum particles is not
ignored but kept in the model in order to semi-explicitly describe the essence
of any flows, that is the process of continuum particles rearrangements. To
allow the continuum particle rearrangements, we admit the deformability of
particle which is described by the distortion field. The ability of media to
flow is characterized by the strain dissipation time which is a characteristic
time necessary for a continuum particle to rearrange with one of its
neighboring particles. It is shown that the continuum particle length scale is
intimately connected with the dissipation time. The governing equations are
represented by a system of first order hyperbolic PDEs with source terms
modeling the dissipation due to particle rearrangements. Numerical examples
justifying the reliability of the proposed approach are demonstrated.Comment: 6 figure
Quasinormal ringing of acoustic black holes in Laval nozzles: Numerical simulations
Quasinormal ringing of acoustic black holes in Laval nozzles is discussed.
The equation for sounds in a transonic flow is written into a
Schr\"{o}dinger-type equation with a potential barrier, and the quasinormal
frequencies are calculated semianalytically. From the results of numerical
simulations, it is shown that the quasinormal modes are actually excited when
the transonic flow is formed or slightly perturbed, as well as in the real
black hole case. In an actual experiment, however, the purely-outgoing boundary
condition will not be satisfied at late times due to the wave reflection at the
end of the apparatus, and a late-time ringing will be expressed as a
superposition of "boxed" quasinormal modes. It is shown that the late-time
ringing damps more slowly than the ordinary quasinormal ringing, while its
central frequency is not greatly different from that of the ordinary one. Using
this fact, an efficient way for experimentally detecting the quasinormal
ringing of an acoustic black hole is discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
A Multi-dimensional Code for Isothermal Magnetohydrodynamic Flows in Astrophysics
We present a multi-dimensional numerical code to solve isothermal
magnetohydrodynamic (IMHD) equations for use in modeling astrophysical flows.
First, we have built a one-dimensional code which is based on an explicit
finite-difference method on an Eulerian grid, called the total variation
diminishing (TVD) scheme. Recipes for building the one-dimensional IMHD code,
including the normalized right and left eigenvectors of the IMHD Jacobian
matrix, are presented. Then, we have extended the one-dimensional code to a
multi-dimensional IMHD code through a Strang-type dimensional splitting. In the
multi-dimensional code, an explicit cleaning step has been included to
eliminate non-zero at every time step. To estimate the
proformance of the code, one- and two-dimensional IMHD shock tube tests, and
the decay test of a two-dimensional Alfv\'{e}n wave have been done. As an
example of astrophysical applications, we have simulated the nonlinear
evolution of the two-dimensional Parker instability under a uniform gravity.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, using aaspp4.sty, 22 text pages with
10 figure
Characteristic form of boost-invariant and cylindrically non-symmetric hydrodynamic equations
It is shown that the boost-invariant and cylindrically non-symmetric
hydrodynamic equations for baryon-free matter may be reduced to only two
coupled differential equations. In the case where the system exhibits the
cross-over phase transition, the standard numerical methods may be applied to
solve these equations and the proposed scheme allows for a very convenient
analysis of the cylindrically non-symmetric hydrodynamic expansion.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 3 sets of figure
Consistent thermodynamic derivative estimates for tabular equations of state
Numerical simulations of compressible fluid flows require an equation of
state (EOS) to relate the thermodynamic variables of density, internal energy,
temperature, and pressure. A valid EOS must satisfy the thermodynamic
conditions of consistency (derivation from a free energy) and stability
(positive sound speed squared). When phase transitions are significant, the EOS
is complicated and can only be specified in a table. For tabular EOS's such as
SESAME from Los Alamos National Laboratory, the consistency and stability
conditions take the form of a differential equation relating the derivatives of
pressure and energy as functions of temperature and density, along with
positivity constraints. Typical software interfaces to such tables based on
polynomial or rational interpolants compute derivatives of pressure and energy
and may enforce the stability conditions, but do not enforce the consistency
condition and its derivatives. We describe a new type of table interface based
on a constrained local least squares regression technique. It is applied to
several SESAME EOS's showing how the consistency condition can be satisfied to
round-off while computing first and second derivatives with demonstrated
second-order convergence. An improvement of 14 orders of magnitude over
conventional derivatives is demonstrated, although the new method is apparently
two orders of magnitude slower, due to the fact that every evaluation requires
solving an 11-dimensional nonlinear system.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, 16 references, submitted to Phys Rev
The prismatic Sigma 3 (10-10) twin bounday in alpha-Al2O3 investigated by density functional theory and transmission electron microscopy
The microscopic structure of a prismatic twin
boundary in \aal2o3 is characterized theoretically by ab-initio
local-density-functional theory, and experimentally by spatial-resolution
electron energy-loss spectroscopy in a scanning transmission electron
microscope (STEM), measuring energy-loss near-edge structures (ELNES) of the
oxygen -ionization edge. Theoretically, two distinct microscopic variants
for this twin interface with low interface energies are derived and analysed.
Experimentally, it is demonstrated that the spatial and energetical resolutions
of present high-performance STEM instruments are insufficient to discriminate
the subtle differences of the two proposed interface variants. It is predicted
that for the currently developed next generation of analytical electron
microscopes the prismatic twin interface will provide a promising benchmark
case to demonstrate the achievement of ELNES with spatial resolution of
individual atom columns
Continuous-time link-based kinematic wave model: formulation, solution existence, and well-posedness
We present a continuous-time link-based kinematic wave model (LKWM) for
dynamic traffic networks based on the scalar conservation law model. Derivation
of the LKWM involves the variational principle for the Hamilton-Jacobi equation
and junction models defined via the notions of demand and supply. We show that
the proposed LKWM can be formulated as a system of differential algebraic
equations (DAEs), which captures shock formation and propagation, as well as
queue spillback. The DAE system, as we show in this paper, is the
continuous-time counterpart of the link transmission model. In addition, we
present a solution existence theory for the continuous-time network model and
investigate continuous dependence of the solution on the initial data, a
property known as well-posedness. We test the DAE system extensively on several
small and large networks and demonstrate its numerical efficiency.Comment: 39 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables, Transportmetrica B: Transport
Dynamics 201
Relativistic MHD Simulations of Jets with Toroidal Magnetic Fields
This paper presents an application of the recent relativistic HLLC
approximate Riemann solver by Mignone & Bodo to magnetized flows with vanishing
normal component of the magnetic field.
The numerical scheme is validated in two dimensions by investigating the
propagation of axisymmetric jets with toroidal magnetic fields.
The selected jet models show that the HLLC solver yields sharper resolution
of contact and shear waves and better convergence properties over the
traditional HLL approach.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
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