20
Tree methods, and the detection of vortical structures in the vortex filament method Andrew Baggaley, Carlo Barenghi, Jason Laurie, Lucy Sherwin, Yuri Sergeev.

Tree methods , and the detection of vortical structures in the vortex filament method

  • Upload
    mabyn

  • View
    15

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Tree methods , and the detection of vortical structures in the vortex filament method. Andrew Baggaley, Carlo Barenghi , Jason Laurie, Lucy Sherwin, Yuri Sergeev . Vortex filament method. Biot-Savart Integral. Model reconnections algorithmically ‘cut and paste’. Mutual friction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Tree methods, and the detection of vortical structures in the vortex

filament method

Andrew Baggaley, Carlo Barenghi, Jason Laurie, Lucy

Sherwin, Yuri Sergeev.

Page 2: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Vortex filament methodBiot-Savart Integral

Model reconnections algorithmically ‘cut and paste’

Page 3: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Mutual friction

Normal viscous fluid coupled to inviscid superfluid via mutual friction.

Superfluid component extracts energy from normal fluid component via Donelly-Glaberson instability, amplification of Kelvin waves.

Counterflow Turbulence

Page 4: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Tree algorithmso Introduced by Barnes &

Hut, (Nature, 1986).o De-facto method for

astrophysical simulations where gravity is important (e.g. galaxy formation).

o Relatively easy to implement numerically.

o Acceptable loss of accuracy when compared to full BS integral (AWB & Barenghi, JLTP, 2011).

o Significant improvement in speed of code O(NlogN) vs O(N2)

Page 5: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method
Page 6: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Sensitivity to reconnection algorithm

Page 7: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Coherent structures• In classical turbulence

vorticity is concentrated in vortical ‘worms’ (She & al, Nature, 1990 ; Goto, JFM, 2008)

• Are there vortex bundles in quantum turbulence ?

• Would allow a mechanism for vortex stretching, i.e. stretch the bundle.

Page 8: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Generation of bundles at finite temperatures

Vortex Locking - Morris, Koplik & Rouson, PRL, 2008Gaussian normal fluid vortex – Samuels, PRB, 1993

Page 9: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Reconnections:Bundles

remain intact

Alamri, Youd & Barenghi, PRL, 2008

Page 10: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Some questions…• What are the role of these structures

in QT?• Transfer energy? Allow vortex

stretching.• How can we detect these structures

(aside from our eyes)• How are structures generated?

Page 11: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Detecting structures

Page 12: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

The importance of vortex bundles

AWB, PoF, 2012

Page 13: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

A surprising result

Roche et al., EPL, 2007

• Fluctuations of vortex line density scale as .

• If we interpret L as a measure of the rms superfluid vorticity.

• Contradiction of the classical scaling of vorticity expected from K41.

• Roche & Barenghi (EPL, 2008) - vortex line density field is decomposed into a polarised component, and a random component.

• Random component advected as a passive scalar explaining scaling.

Page 14: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Quantum turbulence at finite temp.

Drive turbulence in superfluid component to a steady state with imposed normal ‘fluid turbulence’.

Decompose tangle into a polarised and random component.

Measure frequency spectrum of these 2 components, and their contribution to 3D energy spectrum.

Page 15: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Decomposition of the tangle

AWB, Laurie & Barenghi, PRL, 2012

Page 16: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Numerical results

AWB, Laurie & Barenghi, PRL, 2012

Left, frequency spectra (red polarised ; black total), right energy spectrum, upper random component, lower polarised component.

Page 17: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Thermally vs Mechanically Driven

Multi-scale flow, summation of random Fourier modes with imposed Kolmogorov spectrum.

AWB, Sherwin, Barenghi, Sergeev, PRB, 2012.

Page 18: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Generation of bundles via shear flow

Page 19: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

Kelvin-Helmholtz rollup

Page 20: Tree methods , and the detection of  vortical  structures in the vortex filament method

The End