446 research outputs found
Direct numerical simulation of compressible turbulence in a counter-flow channel configuration
Counter-flow configurations, whereby two streams of fluid are brought together from opposite directions, are highly efficient mixers due to the high turbulence intensities that can be maintained. In this paper, a simplified version of the problem is introduced that is amenable to direct numerical simulation. The resulting turbulent flow problem is confined between two walls, with one non-zero mean velocity component varying in the space direction normal to the wall, corresponding to a simple shear flow. Compared to conventional channel flows, the mean flow is inflectional and the maximum turbulence intensity relative to the maximum mean velocity is nearly an order of magnitude higher. The numerical requirements and turbulence properties of this configuration are first determined. The Reynolds shear stress is required to vary linearly by the imposed forcing, with a peak at the channel centreline. A similar behaviour is observed for the streamwise Reynolds stress, the budget of which shows an approximately uniform distribution of dissipation, with large contributions from production, pressure-strain and turbulent diffusion. A viscous sublayer is obtained near the walls and with increasing Reynolds number small-scale streaks in the streamwise momentum are observed, superimposed on the large-scale structures that buffet this region. When the peak local mean Mach number reaches 0.55, turbulent Mach numbers of 0.6 are obtained, indicating that this flow configuration can be useful to study compressibility effects on turbulence
Friends or foes? Relational dissonance and adolescent psychological wellbeing
The interaction of positive and negative relationships (i.e. I like you, but you dislike me - referred to as relational dissonance) is an underexplored phenomenon. Further, it is often only poor (or negative) mental health that is examined in relation to social networks, with little regard for positive psychological wellbeing. Finally, these issues are compounded by methodological constraints. This study explores a new concept of relational dissonance alongside mutual antipathies and friendships and their association with mental health using multivariate exponential random graph models with an Australian sample of secondary school students. Results show male students with relationally dissonant ties have lower positive mental health measures. Girls with relationally dissonant ties have lower depressed mood, but those girls being targeted by negative ties are more likely to have depressed mood. These findings have implications for the development of interventions focused on promoting adolescent wellbeing and consideration of the appropriate measurement of wellbeing and mental illness
Who victimizes whom and who defends whom? A multivariate social network analysis of victimization, aggression, and defending in early childhood
The aim of this research was to investigate the interplay between victim-aggressor relationships and defending relationships in early childhood to test the proposition that young aggressors are less selective than older children in their choice of vulnerable targets. Cross-sectional multivariate statistical social network analyses (Exponential Random Graph Models) for a sample of 177 preschoolers from seven classes, 5- to 7-years-old, revealed that boys were more aggressive than girls, towards both boys and girls, whereas defending relationships were most often same-sex. There was significant reciprocity in aggression, indicating that it was more often bidirectional rather than unidirectional. In addition, aggressors clearly defended each other when they shared their targets of aggression, whereas a marginally significant trend appeared for defending between victims who were victimized by the same aggressors. Furthermore, teacher-rated dominance was positively associated with childrenâs involvement in both aggression and victimization, and teacher-rated insecurity was associated with less aggression, but not with victimization. These findings suggest that those who are reported as being victimized may retaliate, or be aggressive themselves, and do not display some of the vulnerabilities reported among older groups of victims. The findings are in line with the proposition that young aggressors are less strategic than older children in targeting vulnerable victims. The network approach to peer victimization and defending contributes to understanding the social processes facilitating the development of aggression in early childhood
Tilt Induced Localization and Delocalization in the Second Landau Level
We have investigated the behavior of electronic phases of the second Landau
level under tilted magnetic fields. The fractional quantum Hall liquids at
2+1/5 and 2+4/5 and the solid phases at 2.30, 2.44, 2.57, and 2.70
are quickly destroyed with tilt. This behavior can be interpreted as a tilt
driven localization of the 2+1/5 and 2+4/5 fractional quantum Hall liquids and
a delocalization through melting of solid phases in the top Landau level,
respectively. The evolution towards the classical Hall gas of the solid phases
is suggestive of antiferromagnetic ordering
On the performance of WENO/TENO schemes to resolve turbulence in DNS/LES of high-speed compressible flows
Highâspeed compressible turbulent flows typically contain discontinuities and have been widely modelled using Weighted Essentially NonâOscillatory (WENO) schemes due to their highâorder accuracy and sharp shock capturing capability. However, such schemes may damp the small scales of turbulence, and result in inaccurate solutions in the context of turbulenceâresolving simulations. In this connection, the recentlyâdeveloped Targeted Essentially NonâOscillatory (TENO) schemes, including adaptive variants, may offer significant improvements. The present study aims to quantify the potential of these new schemes for a fullyâturbulent supersonic flow. Specifically, DNS of a compressible turbulent channel flow with M =â1: 5 and Re Ď =â222 is conducted using OpenSBLI, a highâorder finite difference CFD framework. This flow configuration is chosen to decouple the effect of flow discontinuities and turbulence and focus on the capability of the aforementioned highâorder schemes to resolve turbulent structures. The effect of the spatial resolution in different directions and coarse grid implicit LES are also evaluated against theWALE LES model. The TENO schemes are found to exhibit significant performance improvements over the WENO schemes in terms of the accuracy of the statistics and the resolution of the threeâdimensional vortical structures. The 6th order adaptive TENO scheme is found to produce comparable results to those obtained with nonâdissipative 4th and 6th order central schemes and reference data obtained with spectral methods. Although the most computationally expensive scheme, it is shown that this adaptive scheme can produce satisfactory results if used as an implicit LES model
Peer victimization in single-grade and multigrade classrooms
Although peer victimization mainly takes place within classrooms, little is known about the impact of the classroom context. To this end, we examined whether single-grade and multigrade classrooms (referring to classrooms with one and two grades in the same room) differ in victim-bully relationships in a sample of elementary school children (646 students; age 8-12 years; 50% boys). The occurrence of victim-bully relationships was similar in single-grade and multigrade classrooms formed for administrative reasons, but lower in multigrade classrooms formed for pedagogical reasons. Social network analyses did not provide evidence that peer victimization depended on age differences between children in any of the three classroom contexts. Moreover, in administrative multigrade classrooms, cross-grade victim-bully relationships were less likely than same-grade victim-bully relationships. The findings did not indicate that children in administrative multigrade classrooms are better or worse off in terms of victim-bully relationships than are children in single-grade classrooms
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