Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Statistics and Scaling in Turbulent Rayleigh-Benard Convection : SpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and Technology - Emily S.C. Ching

Statistics and Scaling in Turbulent Rayleigh-Benard Convection

By: Emily S.C. Ching

Paperback | 21 August 2013

At a Glance

Paperback


$84.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $21.25 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

This Brief addresses two issues of interest of turbulent Rayleigh-B©nard convection. The ï¬rst issue is the characterization and understanding of the statistics of the velocity and temperature ï¬uctuations in the system. The second issue is the revelation and understanding of the nature of the scaling behavior of the velocity temperature structure functions. The problem under the Oberbeck-Boussinesq approximation is formulated. The statistical tools, including probability density functions (PDF) and conditional statistics, for studying fluctuations are introduced, and implicit PDF formulae for fluctuations obeying certain statistical symmetries are derived. Applications of these PDF formulae to study the fluctuations in turbulent Rayleigh-B©nard convection are then discussed. The phenomenology of the different types of scaling behavior: the Bolgiano-Obhukov scaling behavior when buoyancy effects are significant and the Kolmogorov-Obukhov-Corrsin scaling behavior when they are not, is introduced. A crossover between the two types of scaling behavior is expected to occur at the Bolgiano length scale above which buoyancy is important. The experimental observations are reviewed. In the central region of the convective cell, the Kolmogorov-Obukhov-Corrsin scaling behavior has been observed. On the other hand, the Bolgiano-Obukhov scaling remains elusive only until recently. By studying the dependence of the conditional temperature structure functions on the locally averaged thermal dissipation rate, evidence for the Bolgiano-Obukhov scaling has recently been found near the bottom plate. The different behaviors observed in the two regions could be attributed to the different size of the Bolgiano scale. What physics determines the relative size of the Bolgiano scale remains to be understood. The Brief is concluded by a discussion of these outstanding issues.

More in Classical Mathematics

Physics for Beginners : For Beginners - Darran Stobbart

RRP $19.99

$18.75

Engines : The Inner Workings of Machines That Move the World - Theodore Gray
Physics of Oscillations and Waves - Paula Willoughby
Acoustics : An Introduction - Martin Hoover

$449.99

Current Trends in Hydrodynamics - Larry Wineland
Fluid Mechanics : 9th Edition - Frank M. White

RRP $169.95

$139.99

18%
OFF
The God Equation : The Quest for a Theory of Everything - Michio Kaku
More and More and More : An All-Consuming History of Energy - Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
Quanta and Fields : The Biggest Ideas in the Universe - Sean Carroll
Fundamentals of Combustion Engineering - Achintya Mukhopadhyay

RRP $90.99

$71.75

21%
OFF
Introductory Thermodynamics and Fluids Mechanics - Roger Kinsky