scholarly journals Modifying mixing and instability growth in the OMEGA counter-propagating shear campaign

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Catherine Merritt
2006 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 201-204
Author(s):  
J.-M. Clarisse ◽  
C. Boudesocque-Dubois ◽  
J.-P. Leidinger ◽  
J.-L. Willien

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Valentinis ◽  
J. Zaanen ◽  
D. van der Marel

AbstractA highlight of Fermi-liquid phenomenology, as explored in neutral $$^3$$ 3 He, is the observation that in the collisionless regime shear stress propagates as if one is dealing with the transverse phonon of a solid. The existence of this “transverse zero sound” requires that the quasiparticle mass enhancement exceeds a critical value. Could such a propagating shear stress also exist in strongly correlated electron systems? Despite some noticeable differences with the neutral case in the Galilean continuum, we arrive at the verdict that transverse zero sound should be generic for mass enhancement higher than 3. We present an experimental setup that should be exquisitely sensitive in this regard: the transmission of terahertz radiation through a thin slab of heavy-fermion material will be strongly enhanced at low temperature and accompanied by giant oscillations, which reflect the interference between light itself and the “material photon” being the actual manifestation of transverse zero sound in the charged Fermi liquid.


1978 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. I. Meerson ◽  
A. B. Mikhallovskii ◽  
O. A. Pokhotelov

Resonant excitation of Alfvén waves by fast particles in a finite pressure plasma in a non-uniform magnetic field is studied. Plasma compressibility in the wave field is determined both by the curvature of the magnetic lines of force and finite Larmor radius of fast particles. A general expression for the instability growth rate is obtained and analyzed; the applicability of the results obtained in the previous paper has also been studied. The finite pressure stabilization of the trapped particles instability has been found. The bounce-resonance effects are analyzed.


2002 ◽  
Vol 451 ◽  
pp. 239-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. FERNANDEZ ◽  
P. KUROWSKI ◽  
P. PETITJEANS ◽  
E. MEIBURG

Density-driven instabilities between miscible fluids in a vertical Hele-Shaw cell are investigated by means of experimental measurements, as well as two- and three-dimensional numerical simulations. The experiments focus on the early stages of the instability growth, and they provide detailed information regarding the growth rates and most amplified wavenumbers as a function of the governing Rayleigh number Ra. They identify two clearly distinct parameter regimes: a low-Ra, ‘Hele-Shaw’ regime in which the dominant wavelength scales as Ra−1, and a high-Ra ‘gap’ regime in which the length scale of the instability is 5±1 times the gap width. The experiments are compared to a recent linear stability analysis based on the Brinkman equation. The analytical dispersion relationship for a step-like density profile reproduces the experimentally observed trend across the entire Ra range. Nonlinear simulations based on the two- and three-dimensional Stokes equations indicate that the high-Ra regime is characterized by an instability across the gap, wheras in the low-Ra regime a spanwise Hele-Shaw mode dominates.


2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongxuan Zhu ◽  
Yao Zhou ◽  
I. Y. Dodin

The Dimits shift is the shift between the threshold of the drift-wave primary instability and the actual onset of turbulent transport in a magnetized plasma. It is generally attributed to the suppression of turbulence by zonal flows, but developing a more detailed understanding calls for consideration of specific reduced models. The modified Terry–Horton system has been proposed by St-Onge (J. Plasma Phys., vol. 83, 2017, 905830504) as a minimal model capturing the Dimits shift. Here, we use this model to develop an analytic theory of the Dimits shift and a related theory of the tertiary instability of zonal flows. We show that tertiary modes are localized near extrema of the zonal velocity $U(x)$ , where $x$ is the radial coordinate. By approximating $U(x)$ with a parabola, we derive the tertiary-instability growth rate using two different methods and show that the tertiary instability is essentially the primary drift-wave instability modified by the local $U'' \doteq {\rm d}^2 U/{\rm d} x^2 $ . Then, depending on $U''$ , the tertiary instability can be suppressed or unleashed. The former corresponds to the case when zonal flows are strong enough to suppress turbulence (Dimits regime), while the latter corresponds to the case when zonal flows are unstable and turbulence develops. This understanding is different from the traditional paradigm that turbulence is controlled by the flow shear $| {\rm d} U / {\rm d} x |$ . Our analytic predictions are in agreement with direct numerical simulations of the modified Terry–Horton system.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D. Hetland

AbstractBaroclinic instabilities are ubiquitous in many types of geostrophic flow; however, they are seldom observed in river plumes despite strong lateral density gradients within the plume front. Supported by results from a realistic numerical simulation of the Mississippi–Atchafalaya River plume, idealized numerical simulations of buoyancy-driven flow are used to investigate baroclinic instabilities in buoyancy-driven flow over a sloping bottom. The parameter space is defined by the slope Burger number S = Nf−1α, where N is the buoyancy frequency, f is the Coriolis parameter, and α is the bottom slope, and the Richardson number Ri = N2f2M−4, where M2 = |∇Hb| is the magnitude of the lateral buoyancy gradients. Instabilities only form in a subset of the simulations, with the criterion that SH ≡ SRi−1/2 = Uf−1W−1 = M2f−2α 0.2, where U is a horizontal velocity scale and SH is a new parameter named the horizontal slope Burger number. Suppression of instability formation for certain flow conditions contrasts linear stability theory, which predicts that all flow configurations will be subject to instabilities. The instability growth rate estimated in the nonlinear 3D model is proportional to ωImaxS−1/2, where ωImax is the dimensional growth rate predicted by linear instability theory, indicating that bottom slope inhibits instability growth beyond that predicted by linear theory. The constraint SH 0.2 implies a relationship between the inertial radius Li = Uf−1 and the plume width W. Instabilities may not form when 5Li > W; that is, the plume is too narrow for the eddies to fit.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
M. Mahdavi ◽  
H. Khanzadeh

Weibel electromagnetic instability has been studied analytically in relativistic plasma with high parallel temperature, where|α=(mc2/T∥)(1+p^⊥2/m2c2)1/2|≪1and while the collision effects of electron-ion scattering have also been considered. According to these conditions, an analytical expression is derived for the growth rate of the Weibel instability for a limiting case of|ζ=α/2(ω′/ck)|≪1, whereω′is the sum of the wave frequency of instability and the collision frequency of electrons with background ions. The results show that in the limiting conditionα≪1there is an unusual situation of the Weibel instability so thatT∥≫T⊥, while in the classic Weibel instabilityT∥≪T⊥. The obtained results show that the growth rate of the Weibel instability will be decreased due to an increase in the number of collisions and a decrease in the anisotropic temperature by the increasing of plasma density, while the increase of the parameterγ^⊥=(1+p^⊥2/m2c2)1/2leads to the increase of the Weibel instability growth rate.


2018 ◽  
Vol 141 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Li ◽  
Feng Jin ◽  
Weiqiu Chen ◽  
Jiashi Yang

The effect of imperfect interface on the coupled extensional and flexural motions in a two-layer elastic plate is investigated from views of theoretical analysis and numerical simulations. A set of full two-dimensional equations is obtained based on Mindlin plate theory and shear-slip model, which concerns the interface elasticity and tangential discontinuous displacements across the bonding imperfect interface. Some numerical examples are processed, including the propagation of straight-crested waves in an unbounded plate, the buckling of a finite plate, as well as the deflection of a finite plate under uniform load. It is revealed that the bending-evanescent wave in the composites with a perfect interface eventually cuts-on to a propagating shear-like wave with cutoff frequency when the two sublayers imperfectly bonded. The similar phenomenon has been verified once again for coupled face-shear and thickness-shear waves. It also has been pointed out that the interfacial parameter has a great influence on the performance of static buckling, in which the outcome can be reduced to classical buckling load of a simply supported plate when the interface is perfect.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document