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Scrambled and Unscrambled Turbulence

  • Writer: Varad Karkhanis
    Varad Karkhanis
  • Dec 14, 2016
  • 1 min read

The linked fluid dynamics video depicts Rayleigh-Taylor turbulence when driven by a complex acceleration profile involving two stages of acceleration interspersed with a stage of stabilizing deceleration. Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability occurs at the interface separating two fluids of different densities, when the lighter fluid is accelerated in to the heavier fluid. The turbulent mixing arising from the development of the miscible RT instability is of key importance in the design of Inertial Confinement Fusion capsules, and to the understanding of astrophysical events, such as Type Ia supernovae. By driving this flow with an accel-decel-accel profile, we have investigated how structures in RT turbulence are affected by a sudden change in the direction of the acceleration first from destabilizing acceleration to deceleration, and followed by a restoration of the unstable acceleration. By studying turbulence under such highly non-equilibrium conditions, we hope to develop an understanding of the response and recovery of self-similar turbulence to sudden changes in the driving acceleration.

 
 
 

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© 2019 by Varad A. Karkhanis

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