论文标题
磁场对稳定模式的剪力流不稳定性的动量传输和饱和的影响
The impact of magnetic fields on momentum transport and saturation of shear-flow instability by stable modes
论文作者
论文摘要
使用直接数值模拟的2D不可压缩的磁性水力动力学和粘度有限的电阻率和粘度。剪切层自由演变,没有外部强迫,因此随着湍流的压力在其上传输动量,因此随着时间的推移而扩大。与流体动力学中的KH-不稳定流动一样,在没有耗散的情况下,这里的不稳定模式具有共轭稳定模式。稳定的模式显示出可以在其梯度上运输动量,每当幅度超过不稳定模式时,层宽度都会缩小。在磁场弱的模拟中,线性不稳定性受磁场的影响最小,但相对于流体动力学病例,小规模波动增强。这些增强的波动随着能量耗散和更快的层增长一致,这些功能在具有更强场地的模拟中更为明显。这些趋势是由磁场引起的,从而减少了稳定模式相对于能量转移到小尺度的影响。随着场强的增加,稳定模式变得不那么激发,因此对其梯度的动量较少。此外,否则将由于稳定模式转移回驾驶剪切的能量被允许级数级数降低,并在其中丢失以耗散。探索了湍流状态的近似值,以减少的模式探索。虽然雷诺的应力在大尺度上只使用每个波数字只有两种模式很好地描述了,但麦克斯韦的应力却没有。
The Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability of a shear layer with an initially-uniform magnetic field in the direction of flow is studied in the framework of 2D incompressible magnetohydrodynamics with finite resistivity and viscosity using direct numerical simulations. The shear layer evolves freely, with no external forcing, and thus broadens in time as turbulent stresses transport momentum across it. As with KH-unstable flows in hydrodynamics, the instability here features a conjugate stable mode for every unstable mode in the absence of dissipation. Stable modes are shown to transport momentum up its gradient, shrinking the layer width whenever they exceed unstable modes in amplitude. In simulations with weak magnetic fields, the linear instability is minimally affected by the magnetic field, but enhanced small-scale fluctuations relative to the hydrodynamic case are observed. These enhanced fluctuations coincide with increased energy dissipation and faster layer broadening, with these features more pronounced in simulations with stronger fields. These trends result from the magnetic field reducing the effects of stable modes relative to the transfer of energy to small scales. As field strength increases, stable modes become less excited and thus transport less momentum against its gradient. Furthermore, the energy that would otherwise transfer back to the driving shear due to stable modes is instead allowed to cascade to small scales, where it is lost to dissipation. Approximations of the turbulent state in terms of a reduced set of modes are explored. While the Reynolds stress is well-described using just two modes per wavenumber at large scales, the Maxwell stress is not.