8,067 research outputs found

    Interactions of Tollmien-Schlichting waves and Dean vortices. Comparison of direct numerical simulation and a weakly nonlinear theory

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    Direct numerical simulation is used to evaluate a weakly nonlinear theory describing the interaction of Tollmien-Schlichting waves with Dean vortices in curved channel flow. The theory and the simulation agree for certain combinations of parameters, but the two approaches give conflicting results for other combinations. Some possibilities for these discrepancies are discussed

    Sparse Vector Autoregressive Modeling

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    The vector autoregressive (VAR) model has been widely used for modeling temporal dependence in a multivariate time series. For large (and even moderate) dimensions, the number of AR coefficients can be prohibitively large, resulting in noisy estimates, unstable predictions and difficult-to-interpret temporal dependence. To overcome such drawbacks, we propose a 2-stage approach for fitting sparse VAR (sVAR) models in which many of the AR coefficients are zero. The first stage selects non-zero AR coefficients based on an estimate of the partial spectral coherence (PSC) together with the use of BIC. The PSC is useful for quantifying the conditional relationship between marginal series in a multivariate process. A refinement second stage is then applied to further reduce the number of parameters. The performance of this 2-stage approach is illustrated with simulation results. The 2-stage approach is also applied to two real data examples: the first is the Google Flu Trends data and the second is a time series of concentration levels of air pollutants.Comment: 39 pages, 7 figure

    Numerical experiments on the stability of controlled boundary layers

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    Nonlinear simulations are presented for instability and transition in parallel water boundary layers subjected to pressure gradient, suction, or heating control. In the nonlinear regime, finite amplitude, 2-D Tollmein-Schlichting waves grow faster than is predicted by linear theory. Moreover, this discrepancy is greatest in the case of heating control. Likewise, heating control is found to be the least effective in delaying secondary instabilities of both the fundamental and subharmonic type. Flow field details (including temperature profiles) are presented for both the uncontrolled boundary layer and the heated boundary layer

    Multiple paths to subharmonic laminar breakdown in a boundary layer

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    Numerical simulations demonstrate that laminar breakdown in a boundary layer induced by the secondary instability of two-dimensional Tollmien-Schlichting waves to three-dimensional subharmonic disturbances need not take the conventional lambda vortex/high-shear layer path

    Spectral methods in fluid dynamics

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    Fundamental aspects of spectral methods are introduced. Recent developments in spectral methods are reviewed with an emphasis on collocation techniques. Their applications to both compressible and incompressible flows, to viscous as well as inviscid flows, and also to chemically reacting flows are surveyed. The key role that these methods play in the simulation of stability, transition, and turbulence is brought out. A perspective is provided on some of the obstacles that prohibit a wider use of these methods, and how these obstacles are being overcome

    Algorithm implementation on the Navier-Stokes computer

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    The Navier-Stokes Computer is a multi-purpose parallel-processing supercomputer which is currently under development at Princeton University. It consists of multiple local memory parallel processors, called Nodes, which are interconnected in a hypercube network. Details of the procedures involved in implementing an algorithm on the Navier-Stokes computer are presented. The particular finite difference algorithm considered in this analysis was developed for simulation of laminar-turbulent transition in wall bounded shear flows. Projected timing results for implementing this algorithm indicate that operation rates in excess of 42 GFLOPS are feasible on a 128 Node machine

    Numerical simulation of channel flow transition, resolution requirements and structure of the hairpin vortex

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    Three-dimensional, nonlinear numerical simulations are presented for the K-type and H-type transitions for channel flow. There are two objectives. The first is to establish firmly the resolution requirements for the various stages in the transition process. Comparisons between calculations on various grids suggest a set of guidelines for maintaining a physically meaningful calculation. The second objective is to map out the structure of the hairpin vortices which arise in K-type and H-type transitions in channel flow, to the latest stage currently feasible. Flow field details are presented for both a subcritical Reynolds number of 1500 and a supercritical Reynolds number of 8000. The diagnostics include illustrations of the vertical shear, streamwise and spanwise vorticity, helicity, vortex stretching, and vortex diffusion fields

    A three-dimensional spectral algorithm for simulations of transition and turbulence

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    A spectral algorithm for simulating three dimensional, incompressible, parallel shear flows is described. It applies to the channel, to the parallel boundary layer, and to other shear flows with one wall bounded and two periodic directions. Representative applications to the channel and to the heated boundary layer are presented

    A weakly nonlinear theory for wave-vortex interactions in curved channel flow

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    A weakly nonlinear theory is developed to study the interaction of Tollmien-Schlichting (TS) waves and Dean vortices in curved channel flow. The predictions obtained from the theory agree well with results obtained from direct numerical simulations of curved channel flow, especially for low amplitude disturbances. Some discrepancies in the results of a previous theory with direct numerical simulations are resolved

    Iterative spectral methods and spectral solutions to compressible flows

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    A spectral multigrid scheme is described which can solve pseudospectral discretizations of self-adjoint elliptic problems in O(N log N) operations. An iterative technique for efficiently implementing semi-implicit time-stepping for pseudospectral discretizations of Navier-Stokes equations is discussed. This approach can handle variable coefficient terms in an effective manner. Pseudospectral solutions of compressible flow problems are presented. These include one dimensional problems and two dimensional Euler solutions. Results are given both for shock-capturing approaches and for shock-fitting ones
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