scholarly journals A numerical study of gravity-driven instability in strongly coupled dusty plasma. Part 1. Rayleigh–Taylor instability and buoyancy-driven instability

2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikram S. Dharodi ◽  
Amita Das

Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) and buoyancy-driven (BD) instabilities are driven by gravity in a fluid system with inhomogeneous density. The paper investigates these instabilities for a strongly coupled dusty plasma medium. This medium has been represented here in the framework of the generalized hydrodynamics (GHD) fluid model which treats it as a viscoelastic medium. The incompressible limit of the GHD model is considered here. The RT instability is explored both for gradual and sharp density gradients stratified against gravity. The BD instability is discussed by studying the evolution of a rising bubble (a localized low-density region) and a falling droplet (a localized high-density region) in the presence of gravity. Since both the rising bubble and falling droplet have symmetry in spatial distribution, we observe that a falling droplet process is equivalent to a rising bubble. We also find that both the gravity-driven instabilities get suppressed with increasing coupling strength of the medium. These observations have been illustrated analytically as well as by carrying out two-dimensional nonlinear simulations. Part 2 of this paper is planned to extend the present study of the individual evolution of a bubble and a droplet to their combined evolution in order to understand the interaction between them.

2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikram S. Dharodi

In part 1 (V. S. Dharodi and A. Das, J. Plasma Phys. 87 (02), 905870216 (2021)), we simulated the individual dynamics of a bubble (a localized low-density region) and a droplet (a localized high-density region) in a strongly coupled dusty plasma. We observed that under the influence of gravity, the result of a pair of counter-rotating vorticity lobes causes the bubble to rise and droplet to fall. With an interest to understand the hetero- (bubble–droplet) interactions between them, we extend this study to their combined evolution through the following two arrangements. First, both are placed side-by-side in a row at the same height. We observe that the overall dynamics is governed by the competition between the net vertical motion induced by gravity and rotational motion induced by the pairing between two co-rotating inner vorticity lobes. In the second arrangement, the vertically aligned bubble (below) and droplet (above) after collision exchange their partners and subsequently start to move horizontally in opposite directions away from each other. This horizontal movement becomes slower with increasing coupling strength. For these arrangements, we consider varying the distance between the fixed-size bubble and droplet, and varying the coupling strength. To visualize the bubble–droplet interactions, a series of two-dimensional simulations have been conducted in the framework of an incompressible generalized hydrodynamic viscoelastic fluid model.


2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (6) ◽  
pp. 855-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amita Das ◽  
Vikram Dharodi ◽  
Sanat Tiwari

A simplified description of dynamical response of strongly coupled medium is desirable in many contexts of physics. The dusty plasma medium can play an important role in this regard due to its uniqueness, as its dynamical response typically falls within the perceptible grasp of human senses. Furthermore, even at room temperature and normal densities it can be easily prepared to be in a strongly coupled regime. A simplified phenomenological fluid model based on the visco - elastic behaviour of the medium is often invoked to represent the collective dynamical response of a strongly coupled dusty plasma medium. The manuscript reviews the role of this particular Generalized Hydrodynamic (GHD) fluid model in capturing the collective properties exhibited by the medium. In addition the paper also provides new insights on the collective behaviour predicted by the model for the medium, in terms of coherent structures, instabilities, transport and mixing properties.


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