Scaling at the selective withdrawal transition
Fluid Dynamics
2009-11-07 v1 General Physics
Abstract
In the selective withdrawal experiment fluid is withdrawn through a tube with its tip suspended a distance S above an unperturbed two-fluid interface. At low withdrawal rates, Q, the interface forms a steady state hump and only the upper fluid is withdrawn. When Q is increased (or S decreased), the interface undergoes a transition so that the lower fluid is entrained with the upper one, forming a thin steady-state spout. Near this discontinuous transition the hump curvature becomes very large and displays power-law scaling behavior. This scaling is used to show that steady-state profiles for humps at different flow rates and tube heights can all be scaled onto a single similarity profile.
Cite
@article{arxiv.physics/0201036,
title = {Scaling at the selective withdrawal transition},
author = {Itai Cohen and Sidney R. Nagel},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:physics/0201036},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
11 pages, 4 figures