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Turbulence and Structures

Chaos, Fluctuations, and Helical Self-Organization in Nature and Laboratory

  • 1st Edition - August 20, 1999
  • Latest edition
  • Authors: Herman Branover, Semyon Moiseyev, Ephim Golbraikh, Alexander Eidelman
  • Language: English

Turbulence is one of the most wide-spread phenomena in the universe. It relates to processes within the atmosphere, ocean, deep within the earth, as well as to the stars. The… Read more

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Description

Turbulence is one of the most wide-spread phenomena in the universe. It relates to processes within the atmosphere, ocean, deep within the earth, as well as to the stars. The general public usually knows about turbulence from the unpleasant shaking of an airplane, or from disastrous atmospheric phenomena such as typhoons and hurricanes.The chaotic and unpredictable behavior of turbulent movement makes it very difficult to study. The degree of understanding of turbulence is still far from being complete. Some progress was made with the recent advent of a new science--chaos theory. The authors succeeded in examining one basic feature of turbulence called helicity (or spirality) which is the foundation of explaining and predicting the generation of large turbulent structures (e.g. typhoons). Helicity is a universal feature existing not only in fluid flows but also in solid bodies and even in living organisms. This book can be especially useful for researchers and students in fluid mechanics, plasma, geophysics, biology, and meteorology.

Key features


@bul:* Examines the helical mechanism of self-organization in nature and laboratory
* Presents a unified approach to chaos and theory
* Discusses similarities and differences in the formation of dynamic and magnetic structures
* Successfully combines profound theoretical and experimental knowledge
* Includes a disk with an expanded bibliographical database

Readership

Mechanics and mechanical engineers; geophysicists; plasma physicists; physicists researching chaos, magnetohydrodynamics, and radiophysics; as well as meteorologists and biologists.

Table of contents

1. Introduction

2. On the Stability of a Continuous Medium

3. Chaos and Turbulence

4. Large-Scale Structure Generation in Media with Nonzero Helicity of Parameters

5. Instensification of Correlation Coupling and Turbulent Viscosity Decrease n Helical Turbulence

6. MHD Simulation and Helical Turbulence: Geophysical and Hydrodynamic Applications

7. Anomalous Heat and Mass Transfer in Unstable Media
Reference
Index

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: September 1, 1999
  • Language: English

About the authors

HB

Herman Branover

Affiliations and expertise
Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel

SM

Semyon Moiseyev

Affiliations and expertise
Space Research Institute, Moscow, Russia

EG

Ephim Golbraikh

Affiliations and expertise
Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel

AE

Alexander Eidelman

Affiliations and expertise
Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel