Triadic resonances in non-linear simulations of a fluid flow in a precessing cylinder
A. Giesecke, T. Albrecht, T. Gundrum, J. Herault, F. Stefani

TL;DR
This paper uses non-linear simulations to study flow structures in a precessing cylinder, revealing triadic resonances of Kelvin modes that could influence dynamo action in liquid sodium experiments.
Contribution
It demonstrates the emergence of triadic resonances of Kelvin modes in non-linear simulations of precessing cylindrical flows, relevant for dynamo experiments.
Findings
Kelvin modes reach up to 25% of container rotation velocity.
Triadic resonances occur near predicted aspect ratios, except at primary forced mode resonance.
Free Kelvin modes exhibit retrograde drift and reach up to 6% of angular velocity.
Abstract
We present results from three-dimensional non-linear hydrodynamic simulations of a precession driven flow in cylindrical geometry. The simulations are motivated by a dynamo experiment currently under development at Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) in which the possibility of generating a magnetohydrodynamic dynamo will be investigated in a cylinder filled with liquid sodium and simultaneously rotating around two axes. In this study, we focus on the emergence of non-axisymmetric time-dependent flow structures in terms of inertial waves which - in cylindrical geometry - form so-called Kelvin modes. For a precession ratio the amplitude of the forced Kelvin mode reaches up to one fourth of the rotation velocity of the cylindrical container confirming that precession provides a rather efficient flow driving mechanism even at moderate values of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
