Spatio-temporal dynamics in a train of rising bubbles
β Scribed by K. Nguyen; C.S. Daw; P. Chakka; M. Cheng; D.D. Bruns; C.E.A. Finney; M.B. Kennell
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 842 KB
- Volume
- 64
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0923-0467
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It has been suggested that rising bubbles in dense fluids resemble an inverted dripping faucet and that they undergo analogous perioddoubling bifurcations to chaos. We present experimental results that demonstrate that this analogy is weak because the dominant source of instability in the bubble train is inherently different -mutual interactions between spatially separated bubbles as opposed to nozzle dynamics. Unlike the dripping faucet, the initial instability in a bubble train develops at a location far from the injection nozzle and progresses toward the nozzle with increasing gas flow. From qualitative and rigorous quantitative observations, we conclude that rising-bubble dynamics are best described as 'small-box spatio-temporal chaos' with a flow instability. Such dynamics can superficially appear to be simple temporal chaos when considering spatially localized measurements. We show similarity between our experimental results and a bubble-interaction model that accounts for drag and coalescence effects without considering any nozzle dynamics.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We study evolutionary processes induced by spatio-temporal dynamics in prebiotic evolution. Using numerical simulations, we demonstrate that hypercycles emerge from complex interaction structures in multispecies systems. In this work, we also find that 'hypercycle hybrid' protects the hypercycle fro
This study characterized patterns of brain electrical activity associated with selective attention to the color of a stimulus. Multichannel recordings of event-related potentials (ERPs) were obtained while subjects viewed randomized sequences of checkerboards consisting of isoluminant red or blue ch