Departmental Seminar

A nonlinear approach to transition in subcritical plasmas with sheared flow

Mr Ben McMillan
Assistant Professor Department of Physics ,
University of Warwick UK

In many plasma systems, introducing a small background shear flow is enough to stabilize the system linearly. The nonlinear dynamics are much less sensitive to sheared flows than the average linear growthrates, and very small amplitude perturbations can lead to sustained turbulence. We explore the general problem of characterizing how and when the transition from near-laminar states to sustained turbulence occurs; a model of the interchange instability being used as a concrete example. These questions are fundamentally nonlinear, and the answers must go beyond the linear transient amplification of small perturbations. Two methods that account for nonlinear interactions are therefore explored here. The first method explored is edge tracking, which identifies the boundary between the basins of attraction of the laminar and turbulent states. Here, the edge is found to be structured around an exact, localized, traveling wave solution; a solution that is qualitatively similar to avalanche-like bursts seen in the turbulent regime. The second method is an application of nonlinear, non-modal stability theory which allows us to identify the smallest disturbances which can trigger turbulence (the minimal seed for the problem) and hence to quantify how stable the laminar regime is. The results obtained from these fully nonlinear methods provided confidence in the derivation of a semi-analytic approximation for the minimal seed.

Date & time

Tue 12 Dec 2017, 11am–12.30pm

Location

Room:

Oliphant Seminar Room (414)

Audience

Members of RSPE welcome

Contact

Ben McMillan