12,518 research outputs found

    The MHD Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability II: The Roles of Weak and Oblique Fields in Planar Flows

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    We have carried out high resolution MHD simulations of the nonlinear evolution of Kelvin-Helmholtz unstable flows in 2 1/2 dimensions. The modeled flows and fields were initially uniform except for a thin shear layer with a hyperbolic tangent velocity profile and a small, normal mode perturbation. The calculations consider periodic sections of flows containing magnetic fields parallel to the shear layer, but projecting over a full range of angles with respect to the flow vectors. They are intended as preparation for fully 3D calculations and to address two specific questions raised in earlier work: 1) What role, if any, does the orientation of the field play in nonlinear evolution of the MHD Kelvin-Helmholtz instability in 2 1/2 D. 2) Given that the field is too weak to stabilize against a linear perturbation of the flow, how does the nonlinear evolution of the instability depend on strength of the field. The magnetic field component in the third direction contributes only through minor pressure contributions, so the flows are essentially 2D. Even a very weak field can significantly enhance the rate of energy dissipation. In all of the cases we studied magnetic field amplification by stretching in the vortex is limited by tearing mode, ``fast'' reconnection events that isolate and then destroy magnetic flux islands within the vortex and relax the fields outside the vortex. If the magnetic tension developed prior to reconnection is comparable to Reynolds stresses in the flow, that flow is reorganized during reconnection. Otherwise, the primary influence on the plasma is generation of entropy. The effective expulsion of flux from the vortex is very similar to that shown by Weiss for passive fields in idealized vortices with large magnetic Reynolds numbers. We demonstrated that thisComment: 23 pages of ApJ Latex (aaspp4.sty) with 10 figures, high resolution postscript images for figs 4-9 available through anonymous at ftp://ftp.msi.umn.edu/pub/twj To appear in the June 10, 1997 Ap

    The Magnetohydrodynamic Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability: A Three-Dimensional Study of Nonlinear Evolution

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    We investigate through high resolution 3D simulations the nonlinear evolution of compressible magnetohydrodynamic flows subject to the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. We confirm in 3D flows the conclusion from our 2D work that even apparently weak magnetic fields embedded in Kelvin-Helmholtz unstable plasma flows can be fundamentally important to nonlinear evolution of the instability. In fact, that statement is strengthened in 3D by this work, because it shows how field line bundles can be stretched and twisted in 3D as the quasi-2D Cat's Eye vortex forms out of the hydrodynamical motions. In our simulations twisting of the field may increase the maximum field strength by more than a factor of two over the 2D effect. If, by these developments, the Alfv\'en Mach number of flows around the Cat's Eye drops to unity or less, our simulations suggest magnetic stresses will eventually destroy the Cat's Eye and cause the plasma flow to self-organize into a relatively smooth and apparently stable flow that retains memory of the original shear. For our flow configurations the regime in 3D for such reorganization is 4MAx504\lesssim M_{Ax} \lesssim 50, expressed in terms of the Alfv\'en Mach number of the original velocity transition and the initial Alfv\'en speed projected to the flow plan. For weaker fields the instability remains essentially hydrodynamic in early stages, and the Cat's Eye is destroyed by the hydrodynamic secondary instabilities of a 3D nature. Then, the flows evolve into chaotic structures that approach decaying isotropic turbulence. In this stage, there is considerable enhancement to the magnetic energy due to stretching, twisting, and turbulent amplification, which is retained long afterwards. The magnetic energy eventually catches up to the kinetic energy, and the nature of flows become magnetohydrodynamic.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures in degraded jpg format (2 in color), paper with original quality figures available via ftp at ftp://ftp.msi.umn.edu/pub/users/twj/mhdkh3dd.ps.gz or ftp://canopus.chungnam.ac.kr/ryu/mhdkh3dd.ps.gz, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa

    Predicting Flood Vulnerable Areas by Using Satellite Remote Sensing Images in Kumamoto City - Japan

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    Flood is a natural disaster that occurs almost every year in Japan. Based on the flood record, it occurs during the rainy season around July each year. The aim of this research is to predict areas vulnerable to flood. The current research location is the Shiragawa watershed. This study was carried out using DEMs data, ALOS AVNIR-2 and Amedas data to produce watershed area, vegetation index, land cover map and isohyet map. DEM data with spatial resolution of 10 meters was derived from the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI) in order to show the watershed. The AVNIR-2 imagery was used to create the land cover map and the vegetation index. The land cover map was created by unsupervised method then verified by using land cover map of the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI). Vegetation index was created by using Normalize Vegetation Index (NDVI) algorithm. The isohyet was obtained using data from rain gauges stationed in Kumamoto Prefecture then interpolating by applying the kriging method. All spatial data was overlaid to create the flood vulnerability map by using Geographic Information System (GIS). This study combines all the data to predict vulnerable areas of flood. The result indicates that the flood occurs in the middle part of Shiragawa watershed

    The MHD Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability III: The Role of Sheared Magnetic Field in Planar Flows

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    We have carried out simulations of the nonlinear evolution of the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability for compressible fluids in 2122\frac{1}{2}-dimensions, extending our previous work by Frank et al (1996) and Jones \etal (1997). In the present work we have simulated flows in the x-y plane in which a ``sheared'' magnetic field of uniform strength ``smoothly'' rotates across a thin velocity shear layer from the z direction to the x direction, aligned with the flow field. We focus on dynamical evolution of fluid features, kinetic energy dissipation, and mixing of the fluid between the two layers, considering their dependence on magnetic field strength for this geometry. The introduction of magnetic shear can allow a Cat's Eye-like vortex to form, even when the field is stronger than the nominal linear instability limit given above. For strong fields that vortex is asymmetric with respect to the preliminary shear layer, however, so the subsequent dissipation is enhanced over the uniform field cases of comparable field strength. In fact, so long as the magnetic field achieves some level of dynamical importance during an eddy turnover time, the asymmetries introduced through the magnetic shear will increase flow complexity, and, with that, dissipation and mixing. The degree of the fluid mixing between the two layers is strongly influenced by the magnetic field strength. Mixing of the fluid is most effective when the vortex is disrupted by magnetic tension during transient reconnection, through local chaotic behavior that follows.Comment: 14 pages including 9 figures (4 figures in degraded jpg format), full paper with original quality figures available via anonymous ftp at ftp://canopus.chungnam.ac.kr/ryu/mhdkh2d.uu, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa

    Brown-Rho Scaling in the Strong Coupling Lattice QCD

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    We examine the Brown-Rho scaling for meson masses in the strong coupling limit of lattice QCD with one species of staggered fermion. Analytical expression of meson masses is derived at finite temperature and chemical potential. We find that meson masses are approximately proportional to the equilibrium value of the chiral condensate, which evolves as a function of temperature and chemical potential.Comment: Prepared for Chiral Symmetry in Hadron and Nuclear Physics (Chiral07), Nov. 13-16, 2007, Osaka, Japa

    On the analytical approach to the N-fold B\"acklund transformation of Davey-Stewartson equation

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    N-fold B\"acklund transformation for the Davey-Stewartson equation is constructed by using the analytic structure of the Lax eigenfunction in the complex eigenvalue plane. Explicit formulae can be obtained for a specified value of N. Lastly it is shown how generalized soliton solutions are generated from the trivial ones

    ACCESS-2: Approximation Concepts Code for Efficient Structural Synthesis, user's guide

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    A user's guide is presented for the ACCESS-2 computer program. ACCESS-2 is a research oriented program which implements a collection of approximation concepts to achieve excellent efficiency in structural synthesis. The finite element method is used for structural analysis and general mathematical programming algorithms are applied in the design optimization procedure

    ACCESS 1: Approximation Concepts Code for Efficient Structural Synthesis program documentation and user's guide

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    The program documentation and user's guide for the ACCESS-1 computer program is presented. ACCESS-1 is a research oriented program which implements a collection of approximation concepts to achieve excellent efficiency in structural synthesis. The finite element method is used for structural analysis and general mathematical programming algorithms are applied in the design optimization procedure. Implementation of the computer program, preparation of input data and basic program structure are described, and three illustrative examples are given

    NEWSUMT: A FORTRAN program for inequality constrained function minimization, users guide

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    A computer program written in FORTRAN subroutine form for the solution of linear and nonlinear constrained and unconstrained function minimization problems is presented. The algorithm is the sequence of unconstrained minimizations using the Newton's method for unconstrained function minimizations. The use of NEWSUMT and the definition of all parameters are described
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