362 research outputs found
MULTIPLE CURRENT SHEET SYSTEMS IN THE OUTER HELIOSPHERE: ENERGY RELEASE AND TURBULENCE
Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, March 21, 201
THE THREE-DIMENSIONAL EVOLUTION OF ION-SCALE CURRENT SHEETS: TEARING AND DRIFT-KINK INSTABILITIES IN THE PRESENCE OF PROTON TEMPERATURE ANISOTROPY
We present the first three-dimensional hybrid simulations of the evolution of
ion-scale current sheets, with an investigation of the role of temperature
anisotropy and associated kinetic instabilities on the growth of the tearing
instability and particle heating. We confirm the ability of the ion cyclotron
and firehose instabilities to enhance or suppress reconnection, respectively.
The simulations demonstrate the emergence of persistent three-dimensional
structures, including patchy reconnection sites and the fast growth of a
narrow-band drift-kink instability, which suppresses reconnection for thin
current sheets with weak guide fields. Potential observational signatures of
the three-dimensional evolution of solar wind current sheets are also
discussed. We conclude that kinetic instabilities, arising from non-Maxwellian
ion populations, are significant to the evolution of three-dimensional current
sheets, and two-dimensional studies of heating rates by reconnection may
therefore over-estimate the ability of thin, ion-scale current sheets to heat
the solar wind by reconnection
Bio-nanotechnology application in wastewater treatment
The nanoparticles have received high interest in the field of medicine and water purification, however, the nanomaterials produced by chemical and physical methods are considered hazardous, expensive, and leave behind harmful substances to the environment. This chapter aimed to focus on green-synthesized nanoparticles and their medical applications. Moreover, the chapter highlighted the applicability of the metallic nanoparticles (MNPs) in the inactivation of microbial cells due to their high surface and small particle size. Modifying nanomaterials produced by green-methods is safe, inexpensive, and easy. Therefore, the control and modification of nanoparticles and their properties were also discussed
On the role of wave-particle interactions in the evolution of solar wind ion distribution functions
Plasma turbulence and kinetic instabilities at ion scales in the expanding solar wind
The relationship between a decaying strong turbulence and kinetic instabilities in a slowly expanding plasma is investigated using two-dimensional (2D) hybrid expanding box simulations. We impose an initial ambient magnetic field perpendicular to the simulation box, and we start with a spectrum of large-scale, linearly polarized, random-phase Alfvénic fluctuations that have energy equipartition between kinetic and magnetic fluctuations and vanishing correlation between the two fields. A turbulent cascade rapidly develops; magnetic field fluctuations exhibit a power-law spectrum at large scales and a steeper spectrum at ion scales. The turbulent cascade leads to an overall anisotropic proton heating, protons are heated in the perpendicular direction, and, initially, also in the parallel direction. The imposed expansion leads to generation of a large parallel proton temperature anisotropy which is at later stages partly reduced by turbulence. The turbulent heating is not sufficient to overcome the expansion-driven perpendicular cooling and the system eventually drives the oblique firehose instability in a form of localized nonlinear wave packets which efficiently reduce the parallel temperature anisotropy. This work demonstrates that kinetic instabilities may coexist with strong plasma turbulence even in a constrained 2D regime
Scale dependence and cross-scale transfer of kinetic energy in compressible hydrodynamic turbulence at moderate Reynolds numbers
We investigate properties of the scale dependence and cross-scale transfer of
kinetic energy in compressible three-dimensional hydrodynamic turbulence, by
means of two direct numerical simulations of decaying turbulence with initial
Mach numbers M = 1/3 and M = 1, and with moderate Reynolds numbers, R_lambda ~
100. The turbulent dynamics is analyzed using compressible and incompressible
versions of the dynamic spectral transfer (ST) and the Karman-Howarth-Monin
(KHM) equations. We find that the nonlinear coupling leads to a flux of the
kinetic energy to small scales where it is dissipated; at the same time, the
reversible pressure-dilatation mechanism causes oscillatory exchanges between
the kinetic and internal energies with an average zero net energy transfer.
While the incompressible KHM and ST equations are not generally valid in the
simulations, their compressible counterparts are well satisfied and describe,
in a quantitatively similar way, the decay of the kinetic energy on large
scales, the cross-scale energy transfer/cascade, the pressure dilatation, and
the dissipation. There exists a simple relationship between the KHM and ST
results through the inverse proportionality between the wave vector k and the
spatial separation length l as k l ~ 3^1/2. For a given time the dissipation
and pressure-dilatation terms are strong on large scales in the KHM approach
whereas the ST terms become dominant on small scales; this is owing to the
complementary cumulative behavior of the two methods. The effect of pressure
dilatation is weak when averaged over a period of its oscillations and may lead
to a transfer of the kinetic energy from large to small scales without a net
exchange between the kinetic and internal energies. Our results suggest that
for large-enough systems there exists an inertial range for the kinetic energy
cascade ...Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
An in situ and in vitro investigation of cytoplasmic TDP-43 inclusions reveals the absence of a clear amyloid signature
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