Rayleigh-Taylor instability experiments with precise and arbitrary control of the initial interface shape

ORAL

Abstract

For a gravitationally-driven Rayleigh-Taylor instability, a dense fluid initially sits metastably atop a less dense fluid, a configuration that can be stabilized using a magnetic field gradient when one fluid is highly paramagnetic. On switching off the magnetic field, the instability occurs as the dense fluid falls under gravity. By affixing appropriately shaped magnetically-permeable materials to the outside of the cell, we impose arbitrarily-chosen, well-controlled, and jitter-free initial perturbations on the interface. This technique is used to examine both the linear and nonlinear regimes, including growth rates and nonlinear growth coefficients, as functions of the imposed perturbation wavelength and amplitude.

Authors

  • Pierre Carles

    Universite Paris 6, Paris, France

  • Zhibin Huang

    Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Antonio De Luca

    Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Timothy Atherton

    Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Matthew Bird

    Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Charles Rosenblatt

    Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio