Group theory analysis of early-time scale-dependent dynamics of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability with time varying acceleration

ORAL

Abstract

We consider the long-standing problem of Rayleigh-Taylor instability with variable acceleration, and focus on the early-time scale-dependent dynamics of an interface separating in-compressible ideal fluids of different densities subject to an acceleration being a power-law function of time for a spatially extended three-dimensional flow periodic in the plane normal to the acceleration with symmetry group p6mm. By employing group theory and scaling analysis, we discover two distinct sub-regimes of the early-time dynamics depending on the exponent of the acceleration power-law. The time scale and the early-time dynamics are set by the acceleration for exponents greater than (-2), and by the initial growth-rate (due to, e.g., initial conditions) for exponents smaller than (-2). At the exponent value (-2) a transition occurs from one sub-regime to the other with varying acceleration strength. For a broad range of the acceleration parameters, the instability growth rate is explicitly found, the dependence of the dynamics on the initial conditions is investigated, and theory benchmarks are elaborated.

Authors

  • Desmond L. Hill

    The University of Western Australia

  • Aklant K. Bhowmick

    Carnegie Mellon University

  • Dan V. Ilyin

    California Institute of Technology

  • Snezhana I. Abarzhi

    The University of Western Australia