619 research outputs found
Magnetic Fluctuations and Turbulence in the Venus Magnetosheath and Wake
Recent research has shown that distinct physical regions in the Venusian
induced magnetosphere are recognizable from the variations of strength and of
wave/fluctuation activity of the magnetic field. In this paper the statistical
properties of magnetic fluctuations are investigated in the Venusian
magnetosheath, terminator, and wake regions. The latter two regions were not
visited by previous missions. We found 1/f fluctuations in the magnetosheath,
large-scale structures near the terminator and more developed turbulence
further downstream in the wake. Location independent short-tailed non-Gaussian
statistics was observed.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Is current disruption associated with an inverse cascade?
Current disruption (CD) and the related kinetic instabilities in the
near-Earth magnetosphere represent physical mechanisms which can trigger
multi-scale substorm activity including global reorganizations of the
magnetosphere. Lui et al. (2008) proposed a CD scenario in which the kinetic
scale linear modes grow and reach the typical dipolarization scales through an
inverse cascade. The experimental verification of the inverse nonlinear cascade
is based on wavelet analysis. In this paper the Hilbert-Huang transform is used
which is suitable for nonlinear systems and allows to reconstruct the
time-frequency representation of empirical decomposed modes in an adaptive
manner. It was found that, in the Lui et al. (2008) event, the modes evolve
globally from high-frequencies to low-frequencies. However, there are also
local frequency evolution trends oriented towards high-frequencies, indicating
that the underlying processes involve multi-scale physics and non-stationary
fluctuations for which the simple inverse cascade scenario is not correct.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
FREE VIBRATION OF THIN-WALLED BEAMS
Consistent and simple lumped mass matrices are formulated for the
dynamic analysis of beams with arbitrary cross-section. The development is
based on a general beam theory which includes the effect of flexural-torsion
coupling, the constrained torsion warping and the shear centre location.
Numerical tests are presented to demonstrate the importance of torsion warping
constraints and the acceptable accuracy of the lumped mass matrix formulation
Intermittent turbulence, noisy fluctuations and wavy structures in the Venusian magnetosheath and wake
Recent research has shown that distinct physical regions in the Venusian
induced magnetosphere are recognizable from the variations of strength of the
magnetic field and its wave/fluctuation activity. In this paper the statistical
properties of magnetic fluctuations are investigated in the Venusian
magnetosheath and wake regions. The main goal is to identify the characteristic
scaling features of fluctuations along Venus Express (VEX) trajectory and to
understand the specific circumstances of the occurrence of different types of
scalings. For the latter task we also use the results of measurements from the
previous missions to Venus. Our main result is that the changing character of
physical interactions between the solar wind and the planetary obstacle is
leading to different types of spectral scaling in the near-Venusian space.
Noisy fluctuations are observed in the magnetosheath, wavy structures near the
terminator and in the nightside near-planet wake. Multi-scale turbulence is
observed at the magnetosheath boundary layer and near the quasi-parallel bow
shock. Magnetosheath boundary layer turbulence is associated with an average
magnetic field which is nearly aligned with the Sun-Venus line. Noisy magnetic
fluctuations are well described with the Gaussian statistics. Both
magnetosheath boundary layer and near shock turbulence statistics exhibit
non-Gaussian features and intermittency over small spatio-temporal scales. The
occurrence of turbulence near magnetosheath boundaries can be responsible for
the local heating of plasma observed by previous missions
Finite element analysis of stiffened plates
The paper presents the development of a new plate/shell stiffener element and the subsequent application in determine frequencies, mode shapes and buckling loads of different stiffened panels. In structural modelling, the plate and the stiffener are treated as separate finite elements where the displacement compatibility transformation takes into account the torsion - flexural coupling in the stiffener and the eccentricity of internal (contact) forces between the beam - plate/shell parts. The model becomes considerably more flexible due to this coupling technique. The development of the stiffener is based on a general beam theory, which includes the constraint torsional warping effect and the second order terms of finite rotations. Numerical tests are presented to demonstrate the importance of torsion warping constraints. As part of the validation of the results, complete shell finite element analyses were made for stiffened plates
Turbulence-generated proton-scale structures in the terrestrial magnetosheath
Recent results of numerical magnetohydrodynamic simulations suggest that in
collisionless space plasmas turbulence can spontaneously generate thin current
sheets. These coherent structures can partially explain intermittency and the
non-homogenous distribution of localized plasma heating in turbulence. In this
Letter Cluster multi-point observations are used to investigate the
distribution of magnetic field discontinuities and the associated small-scale
current sheets in the terrestrial magnetosheath downstream of a quasi-parallel
bow shock. It is shown experimentally, for the first time, that the strongest
turbulence generated current sheets occupy the long tails of probability
distribution functions (PDFs) associated with extremal values of magnetic field
partial derivatives. During the analyzed one hour long time interval, about a
hundred strong discontinuities, possibly proton-scale current sheets were
observed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 819,
Number 1, 201
On the entropy of plasmas described with regularized -distributions
In classical thermodynamics the entropy is an extensive quantity, i.e.\ the
sum of the entropies of two subsystems in equilibrium with each other is equal
to the entropy of the full system consisting of the two subsystems. The
extensitivity of entropy has been questioned in the context of a theoretical
foundation for the so-called -distributions, which describe plasma
constituents with power-law velocity distributions. We demonstrate here, by
employing the recently introduced {\it regularized -distributions},
that entropy can be defined as an extensive quantity even for such
power-law-like distributions that truncate exponentially.Comment: Preprint accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
A nonextensive entropy path to probability distributions in solar wind turbulence
International audienceThe observed scale dependence of the probability distributions of the differences of characteristic solar wind variables is analyzed. Intermittency of the turbulent fluctuations at small-scale spatial separations is accompanied by strongly non-Gaussian distributions that turn into a normal distribution for large-scale separation. Conventional theoretical models are subject to insufficient physical justification since nonlocality in turbulence should be based on long-range interactions, provided recently by the bi-kappa distribution in the context of nonextensive thermo-statistics. Observed WIND and ACE probability distributions are accurately reproduced for different time lags by the one-parameter bi-kappa functional, a core-halo convolution, where kappa measures the degree of nonlocality or nonextensivity in the system. Gradual decoupling is obtained by enhancing the spatial separation scale corresponding to increasing kappa values, where a Gaussian is approached for infinite kappa. Consequently, long-range interactions introduced on the fundamental level of entropy generalization, are able to provide physically the source of the observed scale dependence of the turbulent fluctuations in the intermittent interplanetary medium
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