610 research outputs found
Lossless Transmission Lines Terminated by Linear and Nonlinear RLC-Loads
Here we consider lossless transmission lines terminated by a circuit consisting of linear and nonlinear RGCL-loads. First we overcome a difficulty caused by nonlinear boundary conditions utilizing Kirchhoff’s laws. The problem arising is to choose as many equations as are the unknown functions. Then we formulate the mixed problem for the hyperbolic system, reduce the mixed problem to an initial value problem on the boundary and obtain a neutral system with respect to new variables. Further on we prove an existence-uniqueness theorem for periodic solution in lossless case
Approaching the Asymptotic Regime of Rapidly Rotating Convection: Boundary Layers vs Interior Dynamics
Rapidly rotating Rayleigh-B\'enard convection is studied by combining results
from direct numerical simulations (DNS), laboratory experiments and asymptotic
modeling. The asymptotic theory is shown to provide a good description of the
bulk dynamics at low, but finite Rossby number. However, large deviations from
the asymptotically predicted heat transfer scaling are found, with laboratory
experiments and DNS consistently yielding much larger Nusselt numbers than
expected. These deviations are traced down to dynamically active Ekman boundary
layers, which are shown to play an integral part in controlling heat transfer
even for Ekman numbers as small as . By adding an analytical
parameterization of the Ekman transport to simulations using stress-free
boundary conditions, we demonstrate that the heat transfer jumps from values
broadly compatible with the asymptotic theory to states of strongly increased
heat transfer, in good quantitative agreement with no-slip DNS and compatible
with the experimental data. Finally, similarly to non-rotating convection, we
find no single scaling behavior, but instead that multiple well-defined
dynamical regimes exist in rapidly-rotating convection systems.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters on 17 July 201
Conversion of internal gravity waves into magnetic waves
Asteroseismology probes the interiors of stars by studying oscillation modes at a star's surface. Although pulsation spectra are well understood for solar-like oscillators, a substantial fraction of red giant stars observed by Kepler exhibit abnormally low-amplitude dipole oscillation modes. Fuller et al. (2015) suggest this effect is produced by strong core magnetic fields that scatter dipole internal gravity waves (IGWs) into higher multipole IGWs or magnetic waves. In this paper, we study the interaction of IGWs with a magnetic field to test this mechanism. We consider two background stellar structures: one with a uniform magnetic field, and another with a magnetic field that varies both horizontally and vertically. We derive analytic solutions to the wave propagation problem and validate them with numerical simulations. In both cases, we find perfect conversion from IGWs into magnetic waves when the IGWs propagate into a region exceeding a critical magnetic field strength. Downward propagating IGWs cannot reflect into upward propagating IGWs because their vertical wavenumber never approaches zero. Instead, they are converted into upward propagating slow (Alfvénic) waves, and we show they will likely dissipate as they propagate back into weakly magnetized regions. Therefore, strong internal magnetic fields can produce dipole mode suppression in red giants, and gravity modes will likely be totally absent from the pulsation spectra of sufficiently magnetized stars
Statistical properties of coronal hole rotation rates: Are they linked to the solar interior?
The present paper discusses results of a statistical study of the
characteristics of coronal hole (CH) rotation in order to find connections to
the internal rotation of the Sun. The goal is to measure CH rotation rates and
study their distribution over latitude and their area sizes. In addition, the
CH rotation rates are compared with the solar photospheric and inner layer
rotational profiles. We study coronal holes observed within latitude
and longitude degrees from the solar disc centre during the time span from the
1 January 2013 to 20 April 2015, which includes the extended peak of solar
cycle 24.We used data created by the Spatial Possibilistic Clustering Algorithm
(SPoCA), which provides the exact location and characterisation of solar
coronal holes using SDO=AIA 193 {\AA} channel images. The CH rotation rates are
measured with four-hour cadence data to track variable positions of the CH
geometric centre. North-south asymmetry was found in the distribution of
coronal holes: about 60 percent were observed in the northern hemisphere and 40
percent were observed in the southern hemisphere. The smallest and largest CHs
were present only at high latitudes. The average sidereal rotation rate for 540
examined CHs is degrees/d. Conclusions. The latitudinal
characteristics of CH rotation do not match any known photospheric rotation
profile. The CH angular velocities exceed the photospheric angular velocities
at latitudes higher than 35-40 degrees. According to our results, the CH
rotation profile perfectly coincides with tachocline and the lower layers of
convection zone at around 0.71 ; this indicates that CHs may be
linked to the solar global magnetic field, which originates in the tachocline
region.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Energy Conservation and Gravity Waves in Sound-proof Treatments of Stellar Interiors: Part I Anelastic Approximations
Typical flows in stellar interiors are much slower than the speed of sound.
To follow the slow evolution of subsonic motions, various sound-proof equations
are in wide use, particularly in stellar astrophysical fluid dynamics. These
low-Mach number equations include the anelastic equations. Generally, these
equations are valid in nearly adiabatically stratified regions like stellar
convection zones, but may not be valid in the sub-adiabatic, stably stratified
stellar radiative interiors. Understanding the coupling between the convection
zone and the radiative interior is a problem of crucial interest and may have
strong implications for solar and stellar dynamo theories as the interface
between the two, called the tachocline in the Sun, plays a crucial role in many
solar dynamo theories. Here we study the properties of gravity waves in
stably-stratified atmospheres. In particular, we explore how gravity waves are
handled in various sound-proof equations. We find that some anelastic
treatments fail to conserve energy in stably-stratified atmospheres, instead
conserving pseudo-energies that depend on the stratification, and we
demonstrate this numerically. One anelastic equation set does conserve energy
in all atmospheres and we provide recommendations for converting low-Mach
number anelastic codes to this set of equations.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 20 pages emulateapj format, 7
figure
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