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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2014

2D Rayleigh-Taylor instability: Interfacial arc-length vs. deformation amplitude

Résumé

Fluid interface instabilities are usually studied through the time evolution of the amplitude of deformation of the interface. While this approach is convenient, it often fails to fully describe the evolution of a deforming interface, especially when the interface cannot be represented as a single-valued function of a space coordinate. Here, we present experimental data on the Rayleigh-Taylor 2D instability for immiscible fluids having a single-mode sinusoidal initial perturbation, which is obtained through the use of magnetic levitation. We observe that new information can be retrieved by using an alternate metric to the amplitude, viz., the total arc-length of the interface (in 2D), or equivalently its total surface area (in 3D). In particular, we identify a master curve for the evolution of the arc-length over time, following three different regimes and on which all our data points fall. We conjecture that the exploration of such alternate metrics will yield interesting results on a broad range of interface instabilities.
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Dates et versions

hal-02447673 , version 1 (21-01-2020)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-02447673 , version 1

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M.-C. Renoult, Pierre Carlès, Sameh Ferjani, Charles Rosenblatt. 2D Rayleigh-Taylor instability: Interfacial arc-length vs. deformation amplitude. APS-DFD, Nov 2014, San Fransisco, Californie, United States. ⟨hal-02447673⟩
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