Weakly nonlinear thermohaline convection in a sparsely packed porous medium due to horizontal magnetic field

2021 ◽  
Vol 136 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Benerji Babu ◽  
N. Venkata Koteswara Rao ◽  
S. G. Tagare
1995 ◽  
Vol 300 ◽  
pp. 287-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. P. Brownjohn ◽  
N. E. Hurlburt ◽  
M. R. E. Proctor ◽  
N. O. Weiss

We present results of numerical experiments on two-dimensional compressible convection in a polytropic layer with an imposed horizontal magnetic field. Our aim is to determine how far this geometry favours the occurrence of travelling waves. We therefore delineate the region of parameter space where travelling waves are stable, explore the ways in which they lose stability and investigate the physical mechanisms that are involved. In the magnetically dominated regime (with the plasma beta, $\hat{\beta}$ = 8), convection sets in at an oscillatory bifurcation and travelling waves are preferred to standing waves. Standing waves are stable in the strong-field regime ($\hat{\beta}$ = 32) but travelling waves are again preferred in the intermediate region ($\hat{\beta}$ = 128), as suggested by weakly nonlinear Boussinesq results. In the weak-field regime ($\hat{\beta}$ ≥ 512) the steady nonlinear solution undergoes symmetry-breaking bifurcations that lead to travelling waves and to pulsating waves as the Rayleigh number, $\circ{R}$, is increased. The numerical experiments are interpreted by reference to the bifurcation structure in the ($\hat{\beta}$, $\circ{R}$)-plane, which is dominated by the presence of two multiple (Takens-Bogdanov) bifurcations. Physically, the travelling waves correspond to slow magnetoacoustic modes, which travel along the magnetic field and are convectively excited. We conclude that they are indeed more prevalent when the field is horizontal than when it is vertical.


2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-77
Author(s):  
R. Hemalatha

Abstract The effect of a magnetic field dependent viscosity on a Soret driven ferro thermohaline convection in a rotating porous medium has been investigated using the linear stability analysis. The normal mode technique is applied. A wide range of values of the Soret parameter, magnetization parameter, the magnetic field dependent viscosity, Taylor number and the permeability of porous medium have been considered. A Brinkman model is used. Both stationary and oscillatory instabilities have been obtained. It is found that the system stabilizes only through oscillatory mode of instability. It is found that the magnetization parameter and the permeability of the porous medium destabilize the system and the Soret parameter, the magnetic field dependent viscosity and the Taylor number tend to stabilize the system. The results are presented numerically and graphically


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 137-144
Author(s):  
Pardeep Kumar ◽  
Sumit Gupta

An attempt has been made to investigate the instability of the plane interface between two viscoelastic superposed conducting fluids in the presence of suspended particles and variable horizontal magnetic field through porous medium is studied. The cases of two fluids of uniform densities, viscosities, magnetic fields, and suspended particles number densities separated by a horizontal boundary; and of exponentially varying density, viscosity, suspended particles number density, and magnetic field are considered. It is found that the stability criterion is independent of the effects of viscoelasticity, medium porosity, and suspended particles but is dependent on the orientation and magnitude of the magnetic field. The magnetic field succeeds in stabilizing a certain range of wavenumbers which were unstable in the absence of the magnetic field. The system is found to be stable for potentially stable configuration/stratification. The growth rates are found to increase (for certain wavenumbers) and decrease (for other wavenumbers) with the increase in kinematic viscosity, suspended particles number density, magnetic field, medium permeability and stress relaxation time.


Author(s):  
Sudhir Kumar Pundir ◽  
◽  
Pulkit Kumar Nadian ◽  
Rimple Pundir ◽  
◽  
...  

https://jusst.org/thermal-instability-of-a-couple-stress-ferromagnetic-fluid-in-the-presence-of-variable-gravity-field-and-horizontal-magnetic-field-with-hall-currents-saturating-in-a-porous-medium/


The instabilities that can arise in a stratified, rapidly rotating, magnetohydrodynamic system such as the Earth’s core are often thought to play a key role in dynamo theory — that is, in the study of how the magnetic field in the system is maintained in the face of ohmic dissipation. An account of such instabilities is to be found in the M.A.C.- wave theory of Braginsky (1967), who, however, laid his greatest emphasis on the dissipationless modes, an idealization which leads to difficulties described below, ohmic and thermal diffusion is therefore restored, and three key dimensionless parameters are isolated: q , the ratio of thermal to ohmic diffusivities; A, a measure of the relative importance of Coriolis and magnetic forces; and R , a Rayleigh number, which is here the ratio of buoyancy to Coriolis forces. This study concentrates on a particular M.A.C.-wave model originally proposed by Braginsky. It consists of a horizontal layer containing a uniform horizontal magnetic field, B0, and rotated about the vertial, an adverse temperature gradient being maintained on the horizontal boundaries to provide the unstable density stratification. In the rotationally dominant case of large A, the principle of the exchange of stabilities holds, and the motions that arise in the marginal state are steady. The planform of the convection is in rolls orthogonal to B0. If q and A are sufficiently small the principle of the exchange of stabilities remains valid, but the planform consists of one or other of two families of rolls oblique to B0, or a combination of each. If q is large but A is small, the modes are again oblique, but overstability occurs, a type of oscillation which also arises when q is large and A takes intermediate values, although the motion is then in rolls transverse to B0. A theory is developed for the weakly nonlinear convection that arises when R exceeds only slightly the critical value Rc{q, A) at which marginal convection occurs. A critical curve q = ^D(A) is located which roughly divides the (qA) plane into regions of small q and of large q , although when q is large it separates the largeAq from the small. On the one side of the curve, where q or Xq are sufficiently small, it is concluded that, starting from an arbitrary initial perturbation, the convection that arises when R exceeds Rc will ultimately become a completely regular tesselated pattern filling the horizontal plane. On the other side of the curve the situation is considerably more complicated but it is argued that, for sufficiently large q and Aq, subcritical instabilities can occur and that supercritical bursting is likely; that is, the instability that arises from the general initial perturbation will focus into a small spot in a finite time. The relevance of the theory to sunspot formation is discussed. In an appendix, the form of the weakly nonlinear convection that arises when q differs only slightly from qB, and R only slightly from R c, is considered in situations in which the exchange of stabilities holds.


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