2,956 research outputs found
The role of zero-clusters in exchange-driven growth with and without input
The exchange-driven growth model describes the mean field kinetics of a
population of composite particles (clusters) subject to pairwise exchange
interactions. Exchange in this context means that upon interaction of two
clusters, one loses a constituent unit (monomer) and the other gains this unit.
Two variants of the exchange-driven growth model appear in applications. They
differ in whether clusters of zero size are considered active or passive. In
the active case, clusters of size zero can acquire a monomer from clusters of
positive size. In the passive case they cannot, meaning that clusters reaching
size zero are effectively removed from the system. The large time behaviour is
very different for the two variants of the model. We first consider an isolated
system. In the passive case, the cluster size distribution tends towards a
self-similar evolution and the typical cluster size grows as a power of time.
In the active case, we identify a broad class of kernels for which the the
cluster size distribution tends to a non-trivial time-independent equilibrium
in which the typical cluster size is finite. We next consider a non-isolated
system in which monomers are input at a constant rate. In the passive case, the
cluster size distribution again attains a self-similar profile in which the
typical cluster size grows as a power of time. In the active case, a surprising
new behavior is found: the cluster size distribution asymptotes to the same
equilibrium profile found in the isolated case but with an amplitude that grows
linearly in time
A model differential equation for turbulence
A phenomenological turbulence model in which the energy spectrum obeys a
nonlinear diffusion equation is presented. This equation respects the scaling
properties of the original Navier-Stokes equations and it has the Kolmogorov
-5/3 cascade and the thermodynamic equilibrium spectra as exact steady state
solutions. The general steady state in this model contains a nonlinear mixture
of the constant-flux and thermodynamic components. Such "warm cascade"
solutions describe the bottleneck phenomenon of spectrum stagnation near the
dissipative scale. Self-similar solutions describing a finite-time formation of
steady cascades are analysed and found to exhibit nontrivial scaling behaviour.Comment: April 10 2003 Updated April 22 2003, 9 pages revtex4, 9 figures Added
some figures, additional references and corrected typo
Craig's XY distribution and the statistics of Lagrangian power in two-dimensional turbulence
We examine the probability distribution function (PDF) of the energy injection rate (power) in numerical simulations of stationary two-dimensional (2D) turbulence in the Lagrangian frame. The simulation is designed to mimic an electromagnetically driven fluid layer, a well-documented system for generating 2D turbulence in the laboratory. In our simulations, the forcing and velocity fields are close to Gaussian. On the other hand, the measured PDF of injected power is very sharply peaked at zero, suggestive of a singularity there, with tails which are exponential but asymmetric. Large positive fluctuations are more probable than large negative fluctuations. It is this asymmetry of the tails which leads to a net positive mean value for the energy input despite the most probable value being zero. The main features of the power distribution are well described by Craig's XY distribution for the PDF of the product of two correlated normal variables. We show that the power distribution should exhibit a logarithmic singularity at zero and decay exponentially for large absolute values of the power. We calculate the asymptotic behavior and express the asymmetry of the tails in terms of the correlation coefficient of the force and velocity. We compare the measured PDFs with the theoretical calculations and briefly discuss how the power PDF might change with other forcing mechanisms
The life-cycle of drift-wave turbulence driven by small scale instability
We demonstrate theoretically and numerically the zonal-flow/drift-wave
feedback mechanism for the LH transition in an idealised model of plasma
turbulence driven by a small scale instability. Zonal flows are generated by a
secondary modulational instability of the modes which are directly driven by
the primary instability. The zonal flows then suppress the small scales thereby
arresting the energy injection into the system, a process which can be
described using nonlocal wave turbulence theory. Finally, the arrest of the
energy input results in saturation of the zonal flows at a level which can be
estimated from the theory and the system reaches stationarity without damping
of the large scales.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Constant flux relation for diffusion-limited cluster-cluster aggregation
In a nonequilibrium system, a constant flux relation (CFR) expresses the fact that a constant flux of a conserved quantity exactly determines the scaling of the particular correlation function linked to the flux of that conserved quantity. This is true regardless of whether mean-field theory is applicable or not. We focus on cluster-cluster aggregation and discuss the consequences of mass conservation for the steady state of aggregation models with a monomer source in the diffusion-limited regime. We derive the CFR for the flux-carrying correlation function for binary aggregation with a general scale-invariant kernel and show that this exponent is unique. It is independent of both the dimension and of the details of the spatial transport mechanism, a property which is very atypical in the diffusion-limited regime. We then discuss in detail the "locality criterion" which must be satisfied in order for the CFR scaling to be realizable. Locality may be checked explicitly for the mean-field Smoluchowski equation. We show that if it is satisfied at the mean-field level, it remains true over some finite range as one perturbatively decreases the dimension of the system below the critical dimension, d(c)=2, entering the fluctuation-dominated regime. We turn to numerical simulations to verify locality for a range of systems in one dimension which are, presumably, beyond the perturbative regime. Finally, we illustrate how the CFR scaling may break down as a result of a violation of locality or as a result of finite size effects and discuss the extent to which the results apply to higher order aggregation processes
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