438 research outputs found

    Anelastic Versus Fully Compressible Turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard Convection

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    Numerical simulations of turbulent Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in an ideal gas, using either the anelastic approximation or the fully compressible equations, are compared. Theoretically, the anelastic approximation is expected to hold in weakly superadiabatic systems with ϵ=ΔT/Tr1\epsilon = \Delta T / T_r \ll 1, where ΔT\Delta T denotes the superadiabatic temperature drop over the convective layer and TrT_r the bottom temperature. Using direct numerical simulations, a systematic comparison of anelastic and fully compressible convection is carried out. With decreasing superadiabaticity ϵ\epsilon, the fully compressible results are found to converge linearly to the anelastic solution with larger density contrasts generally improving the match. We conclude that in many solar and planetary applications, where the superadiabaticity is expected to be vanishingly small, results obtained with the anelastic approximation are in fact more accurate than fully compressible computations, which typically fail to reach small ϵ\epsilon for numerical reasons. On the other hand, if the astrophysical system studied contains ϵO(1)\epsilon\sim O(1) regions, such as the solar photosphere, fully compressible simulations have the advantage of capturing the full physics. Interestingly, even in weakly superadiabatic regions, like the bulk of the solar convection zone, the errors introduced by using artificially large values for ϵ\epsilon for efficiency reasons remain moderate. If quantitative errors of the order of 10%10\% are acceptable in such low ϵ\epsilon regions, our work suggests that fully compressible simulations can indeed be computationally more efficient than their anelastic counterparts.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure

    Numerically determined transport laws for fingering ("thermohaline") convection in astrophysics

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    We present the first three-dimensional simulations of fingering convection performed in a parameter regime close to the one relevant for astrophysics, and reveal the existence of simple asymptotic scaling laws for turbulent heat and compositional transport. These laws can straightforwardly be extrapolated to the true astrophysical regime. Our investigation also indicates that thermocompositional "staircases," a key consequence of fingering convection in the ocean, cannot form spontaneously in the fingering regime in stellar interiors. Our proposed empirically-determined transport laws thus provide simple prescriptions for mixing by fingering convection in a variety of astrophysical situations, and should, from here on, be used preferentially over older and less accurate parameterizations. They also establish that fingering convection does not provide sufficient extra mixing to explain observed chemical abundances in RGB stars.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters on October 29th. 15 pages, 4 figures. See Garaud 2010 for companion pape

    The sensitivity of rapidly rotating Rayleigh--B\'enard convection to Ekman pumping

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    The dependence of the heat transfer, as measured by the nondimensional Nusselt number NuNu, on Ekman pumping for rapidly rotating Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in an infinite plane layer is examined for fluids with Prandtl number Pr=1Pr = 1. A joint effort utilizing simulations from the Composite Non-hydrostatic Quasi-Geostrophic model (CNH-QGM) and direct numerical simulations (DNS) of the incompressible fluid equations has mapped a wide range of the Rayleigh number RaRa - Ekman number EE parameter space within the geostrophic regime of rotating convection. Corroboration of the NuNu-RaRa relation at E=107E = 10^{-7} from both methods along with higher EE covered by DNS and lower EE by the asymptotic model allows for this range of the heat transfer results. For stress-free boundaries, the relation Nu1(RaE4/3)αNu-1 \propto (Ra E^{4/3} )^{\alpha} has the dissipation-free scaling of α=3/2\alpha = 3/2 for all E107E \leq 10^{-7}. This is directly related to a geostrophic turbulent interior that throttles the heat transport supplied to the thermal boundary layers. For no-slip boundaries, the existence of ageostrophic viscous boundary layers and their associated Ekman pumping yields a more complex 2D surface in Nu(E,Ra)Nu(E,Ra) parameter space. For E<107E<10^{-7} results suggest that the surface can be expressed as Nu1(1+P(E))(RaE4/3)3/2Nu-1 \propto (1+ P(E)) (Ra E^{4/3} )^{3/2} indicating the dissipation-free scaling law is enhanced by Ekman pumping by the multiplicative prefactor (1+P(E))(1+ P(E)) where P(E)5.97E1/8P(E) \approx 5.97 E^{1/8}. It follows for E<107E<10^{-7} that the geostrophic turbulent interior remains the flux bottleneck in rapidly rotating Rayleigh-B\'enard convection. For E107E\sim10^{-7}, where DNS and asymptotic simulations agree quantitatively, it is found that the effects of Ekman pumping are sufficiently strong to influence the heat transport with diminished exponent α1.2\alpha \approx 1.2 and Nu1(RaE4/3)1.2Nu-1 \propto (Ra E^{4/3} )^{1.2}.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figure

    The effects of Ekman pumping on quasi-geostrophic Rayleigh-Benard convection

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    Numerical simulations of 3D, rapidly rotating Rayleigh-Benard convection are performed using an asymptotic quasi-geostrophic model that incorporates the effects of no-slip boundaries through (i) parameterized Ekman pumping boundary conditions, and (ii) a thermal wind boundary layer that regularizes the enhanced thermal fluctuations induced by pumping. The fidelity of the model, obtained by an asymptotic reduction of the Navier-Stokes equations that implicitly enforces a pointwise geostrophic balance, is explored for the first time by comparisons of simulations against the findings of direct numerical simulations and laboratory experiments. Results from these methods have established Ekman pumping as the mechanism responsible for significantly enhancing the vertical heat transport. This asymptotic model demonstrates excellent agreement over a range of thermal forcing for Pr ~1 when compared with results from experiments and DNS at maximal values of their attainable rotation rates, as measured by the Ekman number (E ~ 10^{-7}); good qualitative agreement is achieved for Pr > 1. Similar to studies with stress-free boundaries, four spatially distinct flow morphologies exists. Despite the presence of frictional drag at the upper and/or lower boundaries, a strong non-local inverse cascade of barotropic (i.e., depth-independent) kinetic energy persists in the final regime of geostrophic turbulence and is dominant at large scales. For mixed no-slip/stress-free and no-slip/no-slip boundaries, Ekman friction is found to attenuate the efficiency of the upscale energy transport and, unlike the case of stress-free boundaries, rapidly saturates the barotropic kinetic energy. For no-slip/no-slip boundaries, Ekman friction is strong enough to prevent the development of a coherent dipole vortex condensate. Instead vortex pairs are found to be intermittent, varying in both time and strength.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure

    Gameplay experience in a gaze interaction game

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    Assessing gameplay experience for gaze interaction games is a challenging task. For this study, a gaze interaction Half-Life 2 game modification was created that allowed eye tracking control. The mod was deployed during an experiment at Dreamhack 2007, where participants had to play with gaze navigation and afterwards rate their gameplay experience. The results show low tension and negative affects scores on the gameplay experience questionnaire as well as high positive challenge, immersion and flow ratings. The correlation between spatial presence and immersion for gaze interaction was high and yields further investigation. It is concluded that gameplay experience can be correctly assessed with the methodology presented in this paper.Comment: pages 49-54, The 5th Conference on Communication by Gaze Interaction - COGAIN 2009: Gaze Interaction For Those Who Want It Most, ISBN: 978-87-643-0475-

    Dynamics of fingering convection I: Small-scale fluxes and large-scale instabilities

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    Double-diffusive instabilities are often invoked to explain enhanced transport in stably-stratified fluids. The most-studied natural manifestation of this process, fingering convection, commonly occurs in the ocean's thermocline and typically increases diapycnal mixing by two orders of magnitude over molecular diffusion. Fingering convection is also often associated with structures on much larger scales, such as thermohaline intrusions, gravity waves and thermohaline staircases. In this paper, we present an exhaustive study of the phenomenon from small to large scales. We perform the first three-dimensional simulations of the process at realistic values of the heat and salt diffusivities and provide accurate estimates of the induced turbulent transport. Our results are consistent with oceanic field measurements of diapycnal mixing in fingering regions. We then develop a generalized mean-field theory to study the stability of fingering systems to large-scale perturbations, using our calculated turbulent fluxes to parameterize small-scale transport. The theory recovers the intrusive instability, the collective instability, and the gamma-instability as limiting cases. We find that the fastest-growing large-scale mode depends sensitively on the ratio of the background gradients of temperature and salinity (the density ratio). While only intrusive modes exist at high density ratios, the collective and gamma-instabilities dominate the system at the low density ratios where staircases are typically observed. We conclude by discussing our findings in the context of staircase formation theory.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, submitted to JF
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