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An important parameter characterising the synchronisation of turbulent flows is the threshold coupling wavenumber. This study investigates the relationship between the threshold coupling wavenumber and the leading Lyapunov vector using large eddy simulations and the SABRA model. Various subgrid-scale stress models, Reynolds numbers and different coupling methods are examined. A new scaling relation is identified for the leading Lyapunov exponents in large eddy simulations, showing that they approximate those of filtered direct numerical simulations. This interpretation provides a physical basis for results related to the Lyapunov exponents of large eddy simulations, including those related to synchronisation. Synchronisation experiments show that the peak wavenumber of the energy spectrum of the leading Lyapunov vector coincides with the threshold coupling wavenumber, in large eddy simulations of box turbulence with standard Smagorinsky or dynamic mixed models as well as in the SABRA model, replicating results from direct numerical simulations of box turbulence. Although the dynamic Smagorinsky model exhibits different behaviour, the totality of the results suggests that the relationship is an intrinsic property of a certain class of chaotic systems. We also confirm that conditional Lyapunov exponents characterise the synchronisation process in indirectly coupled systems as they do in directly coupled ones, with their values insensitive to the nature of the master flow. These findings advance the understanding of the role of the Lyapunov vector in the synchronisation of turbulence.
Today you will first build and test a simple RAM in the FPGA. You will then build a seven-segment decoder ROM and connect it to the output of the FPGA 74HC161 counter you designed in the last lab to show the count on an LED display.
The design of ship hulls girders for strength is presented in this chapter. Engineering design is introduced and the tasks of ship structural design discussed. The stages of ship structural design are presented: concept design, preliminary structural design and detail structural design. The concepts of design principles, design criteria and design philosophy are discussed and elucidated. The elastic and plastic design philosophies of ship structures are presented and differentiated. The means to perform rational design of ship structures are listed. The need to perform limit state design of ship structures is discussed and the limit states included in IACS rules mentioned. (serviceability limit state, the ultimate limit state, the fatigue limit state and the accidental limit state). The interaction of limit states is discussed as is that of relevant failure modes. In the last part of the chapter the theoretical basis of the design loads used in the IACS Common Structural Rules is described. The concept of the design sea state is introduced, the use of short-term analysis, the selection of dominant short-term sea states and the identification of dominant load components described. The concept of the equivalent design wave is introduced and in the last section design loads discussed.
You saw a DIP1 in the previous lab. Fig. 6L.1 shows another, this time an 8-pin mini-DIP, housing the operational amplifiers that we will meet in this and later labs.
Here is a method for spot-checking a suspected bad transistor: the transistor must look like a pair of diodes when you test each junction separately. But, caution: do not take this as a description of the transistor’s mechanism when it is operating: it does not behave like two back-to-back diodes when operating (the circuits of Fig. 4L.1, if made with a pair of ordinary diodes, would be a flop, indeed).
Estimation of near-wall turbulence in channel flow from outer observations is investigated using adjoint-variational data assimilation. We first consider fully resolved velocity data, starting at a distance from the wall. By enforcing the estimated flow to exactly satisfy the Navier–Stokes equations, we seek a statistically stationary turbulent state that reproduces the instantaneous outer measurements. Such an estimated state provides full access to the unknown near-wall turbulence, including the wall shear stresses and pressure. When the first observation is within 50 viscous units from the wall, the correlation coefficient between the true and estimated state exceeds 95 %. As the observations are further separated from the wall, at 90 viscous units, the accuracy of the assimilated wall stresses decreases to 40 % at the wall. This trend is nearly independent of the Reynolds number. The Fourier spectrum of the estimation error is qualitatively consistent with the coherence spectrum between the outer and the inner state variables: observed long wavelength structures in the outer flow have deeper coherence into the unobserved near-wall region and, therefore, the error is lowest at large scales. Nevertheless, the adjoint-variational approach provides a more rigorous quantification of the capacity to accurately predict the instantaneous near-wall turbulence from outer measurements. Lastly, we demonstrate the robustness of the estimation accuracy using filtered and sub-sampled outer observations.
When turbulent convection interacts with a turbulent shear flow, the cores of convective cells become aligned with the mean current, and these cells (which span the height of the domain) may interact with motions closer to the solid boundary. In this work, we use coupled Eulerian–Lagrangian direct numerical simulations of a turbulent channel flow to demonstrate that, under conditions of turbulent mixed convection, interactions between motions associated with ejections and low-speed streaks near the solid boundary and coherent superstructures in the interior of the flow interact and lead to significant vertical transport of strongly settling Lagrangian particles. We show that the primary suspension mechanism is associated with strong ejection events (canonical low-speed streaks and hairpin vortices characterised by $u'\lt 0$ and $w'\gt 0$, where $u'$ and $w'$ are the streamwise and vertical turbulent velocity fluctuations), whereas secondary suspension is strongly associated with large-scale plume structures aligned with the mean shear (characterised by $w'\gt 0$ and $\theta '\gt 0$, where $\theta$ represents temperature fluctuations). This coupling, which is absent in the limiting cases (pure channel flow or free convection) is shown to lead to a sudden increase in the interior concentration profiles as ${Ri}_\tau$, the friction Richardson number, increases, resulting in concentrations that are larger by roughly an order of magnitude at the channel midplane.
Part of what we aim for today is a review, since the circuit includes an unusually broad variety of elements. What you will achieve is the wireless transmission of an audio signal, using optical encoding.
It is generally accepted that the evolution of the deep-water surface gravity wave spectrum is governed by quartet resonant and quasi-resonant interactions. However, it has also been reported in both experimental and computational studies that non-resonant triad interactions can play a role, e.g. generation of bound waves. In this study, we investigate the effects of triad and quartet interactions on the spectral evolution, by numerically tracking the contributions from quadratic and cubic terms in the dynamical equation. In a finite time interval, we find that the contribution from triad interactions follows the trend of that from quartet resonances (with comparable magnitude) for most wavenumbers, except that it peaks at low wavenumbers with very low initial energy. This result reveals two effects of triad interactions. (1) The non-resonant triad interactions can be connected to form quartet resonant interactions (hence exhibiting the comparable trend), which is a reflection of the normal form transformation applied in wave turbulence theory of surface gravity waves. (2) The triad interactions can fill energy into the low-energy portion of the spectrum (low wavenumber part in this case) on a very fast time scale, with energy distributed in both bound and free modes at the same wavenumber. We further analyse the latter mechanism using a simple model with two initially active modes in the wavenumber domain. Analytical formulae describing the distribution of energy in free and bound modes are provided, along with numerical validations.
This lab presents two devices, both partially digital, that have in common the use of feedback to generate an output related in a useful way to an input signal. The first circuit, an analog-to-digital converter, uses feedback to generate the digital equivalent to an analog input voltage.