This paper describes experiments on small solid particle settling behaviour in stationary homogeneous isotropic air turbulence. We present here a new methodology using a recently developed cruciform apparatus: a large horizontal cylindrical vessel equipped with a pair of counter-rotating fans and perforated plates at each end is used to generate stationary near-isotropic turbulence in the core region between the two perforated plates and a long vertical vessel is used to supply heavy descending particles from its top. This novel experimental design, without the unwanted influences from the injection of particles, the mean flow, and the decay of turbulence, allows direct imaging and velocity measurements of the two-way interaction between heavy particles and homogeneous isotropic turbulence. Consequently, the spatiotemporal responses of both fluid turbulence and particle settling can be determined by high-speed digital particle image velocimetry and accelerometry, together with the wavelet transform analysis for the first time. Hence, experimental information on and thereby understanding of the particle settling rate, preferential accumulation, and turbulence modification due to the presence of the particles is obtained.We found that the particle settling velocity (${V}_{s})$ is much greater than the terminal velocity (${V}_{t})$ in still fluid for which the value of (${V}_{s}\,{-}\, {V}_{t})$ reaches a maximum of 0.13$u^\prime $ when the Stokes number $\hbox{\it St}\,{ =}\,\tau_{p}/\tau_{k}\,{\approx}\,$1 and ${V}_{t}/u^\prime \,{\approx}\,$0.5 at $\hbox{\it Re}_{\lambda }\,{=}\,$120 and $\hbox{\it Re}_{p} \,{<}\,$1, in good agreement with previous numerical results, where $\tau _{p}$ is the particle's relaxation time, $\tau _{k}$ is the Kolmogorov time scale, $u^\prime$ is the energy-weighted r.m.s. turbulent intensity, and $\hbox{\it Re}_{\lambda}$ and $\hbox{\it Re}_{p}$ are the Reynolds numbers based on the Taylor microscale ($\lambda$) and the mean diameter of particles, respectively. Non-uniform particle concentration fields are observed and most significant when $\hbox{\it St}\,{\approx}\,$1.0, at which the particle clusters accumulate preferentially around the outer perimeter of small intense banana-shaped vortical structures. These clusters can turn and stretch banana-shaped vortical structures toward the gravitational direction and thus significantly increase the mean settling rate especially when $\hbox{\it St}\,{ =}\,1$. From spatiotemporal analysis of the flatness factor, it is found that the characteristic length and time scales of these preferential particle clusters are related to the spacing between the adjacent intense vorticity structures of the order $\lambda$ and the time passage of these clustering structures of the order $\tau _{k}$, respectively. By comparing the average frequency spectra between laden (heavy particle) and unladen (neutral particle) turbulent flows over the measurement field at a fixed $\hbox{\it Re}_{\lambda }\,{=}\,$120, turbulence augmentation is found for most frequenci...
We present 855 cataclysmic variable candidates detected by the Catalina Real-time Transient Survey (CRTS) of which at least 137 have been spectroscopically confirmed and 705 are new discoveries. The sources were identified from the analysis of five years of data, and come from an area covering three quarters of the sky. We study the amplitude distribution of the dwarf novae CVs discovered by CRTS during outburst, and find that in quiescence they are typically two magnitudes fainter compared to the spectroscopic CV sample identified by SDSS. However, almost all CRTS CVs in the SDSS footprint have ugriz photometry. We analyse the spatial distribution of the CVs and find evidence that many of the systems lie at scale heights beyond those expected for a Galactic thin disc population. We compare the outburst rates of newly discovered CRTS CVs with the previously known CV population, and find no evidence for a difference between them. However, we find that significant evidence for a systematic difference in orbital period distribution. We discuss the CVs found below the orbital period minimum and argue that many more are yet to be identified among the full CRTS CV sample. We cross-match the CVs with archival X-ray catalogs and find that most of the systems are dwarf novae rather than magnetic CVs.
The ensemble-average settling velocity, V s , of heavy tungsten and glass particles with different mean diameters in an aqueous near-isotropic turbulence that was generated by a pair of vertically oscillated grids in a water tank was measured using both particle tracking and particle image velocimetries. Emphasis is placed on the effect of the Stokes number, St, a time ratio of particle response to the Kolmogorov scale of turbulence, to the particle settling rate defined as (V s ϪV t)/ V t where V t is the particle terminal velocity in still fluid. It is found that even when the particle Reynolds number Re p is as large as 25 at which V t /v k Ϸ10 where v k is the Kolmogorov velocity scale of turbulence, the mean settling rate is positive and reaches its maximum of about 7% when St is approaching to unity, indicating a good trend of DNS results by Wang and Maxey ͑1993͒ and Yang and Lei ͑1998͒. This phenomenon becomes more and more pronounced as values of V t /v k decrease, for which DNS results reveal that the settling rate at V t /v k ϭ1 and Re p Ͻ1 can be as large as 50% when StϷ1. However, the present result differs drastically with Monte Carlo simulations for heavy particles subjected to nonlinear drag (Re p Ͼ1) in turbulence in which the settling rate was negative and decreases with increasing St. Using the wavelet analysis, the fluid integral time (I), the Taylor microscale (), and two heavy particles' characteristic times (c1 , c2) are identified for the first time. For StϽ1, c1 Ͻ I and c2 Ͻ , whereas c1 Ϸ I and c2 Ϸ for StϷ1. This may explain why the settling rate is a maximum near StϷ1, because the particle motion is in phase with the fluid turbulent motion only when StϷ1 where the relative slip velocities are smallest. These results may be relevant to sediment grains in rivers and aerosol particles in the atmosphere.
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