A kinetic interpretation of the classical Rayleigh-Taylor instability
John Rodman, Petr Cagas, Ammar Hakim, Bhuvana Srinivasan

TL;DR
This paper uses a continuum-kinetic simulation to explore how collisional mean-free-path influences Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth, revealing new kinetic effects in intermediate collisional regimes not captured by traditional fluid models.
Contribution
It presents the first 5D continuum-kinetic simulation of RT instability, highlighting kinetic physics effects in intermediate collisional regimes beyond fluid model capabilities.
Findings
RT growth rate decreases with increasing mean-free-path.
Intermediate collisionality leads to more diffused interfaces.
Higher moments of the distribution function significantly influence evolution.
Abstract
Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instabilities are prevalent in many physical regimes ranging from astrophysical to laboratory plasmas and have primarily been studied using fluid models, the majority of which have been ideal fluid models. This work is the first of its kind to present a 5-dimensional (2 spatial dimensions, 3 velocity space dimensions) simulation using the continuum-kinetic model to study the effect of the collisional mean-free-path and transport on the instability growth. The continuum-kinetic model provides noise-free access to the full particle distribution function permitting a detailed investigation of the role of kinetic physics in hydrodynamic phenomena such as the RT instability. For long mean-free-path, there is no RT instability growth, but as collisionality increases, particles relax towards the Maxwellian velocity distribution, and the kinetic simulations reproduce the…
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