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Dive into the research topics where Basile Gallet is active.

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Featured researches published by Basile Gallet.


Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics | 2012

Reversals of a large-scale field generated over a turbulent background

Basile Gallet; Johann Herault; Claude Laroche; François Pétrélis; S. Fauve

We present a study of several systems in which a large-scale field is generated over a turbulent background. These large-scale fields break a symmetry of the forcing by selecting a direction. Under certain conditions, the large-scale field displays reversals so that the symmetry of the forcing is recovered statistically. We present examples of such dynamics in the context of the dynamo instability, of two-dimensional turbulent Kolmogorov flows and of turbulent Rayleigh–Bénard convection. In these systems reversals occur respectively for the dynamo magnetic field, for the large-scale circulation generated by a periodic forcing in space and for the large-scale roll generated by turbulent thermal convection. We compare the mechanisms involved and show that their properties depend on some symmetries of the system and on the way they are broken.


European Physical Journal B | 2010

Dynamo regimes and transitions in the VKS experiment

Michael Berhanu; Gautier Verhille; Jean Boisson; Basile Gallet; Christophe Gissinger; S. Fauve; Nicolas Mordant; François Pétrélis; Mickaël Bourgoin; P. Odier; Jean-François Pinton; Nicolas Plihon; Sébastien Aumaître; Arnaud Chiffaudel; François Daviaud; Bérengère Dubrulle; Christophe Pirat

Abstract. The Von Kármán Sodium experiment yields a variety of dynamo regimes, when asymmetry is imparted to the flow by rotating impellers at different speed F1 and F2. We show that as the intensity of forcing, measured as F1+F2, is increased, the transition to a self-sustained magnetic field is always observed via a supercritical bifurcation to a stationary state. For some values of the asymmetry parameter θ = (F1–F2)/(F1+F2), time dependent dynamo regimes develop. They are observed either when the forcing is increased for a given value of asymmetry, or when the amount of asymmetry is varied at sufficiently high forcing. Two qualitatively different transitions between oscillatory and stationary regimes are reported, involving or not a strong divergence of the period of oscillations. These transitions can be interpreted using a low dimensional model based on the interactions of two dynamo modes.


Physical Review E | 2009

From reversing to hemispherical dynamos.

Basile Gallet; François Pétrélis

We show that hemispherical dynamos can result from weak equatorial symmetry breaking of the flow in the interior of planets and stars. Using a model of spherical dynamo, we observe that the interaction between a dipolar and a quadrupolar mode can localize the magnetic field in only one hemisphere when the equatorial symmetry is broken. This process is shown to be related to the one that is responsible for reversals of the magnetic field. These seemingly very different behaviors are thus understood in a unified framework.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2009

Bistability between a stationary and an oscillatory dynamo in a turbulent flow of liquid sodium

Michael Berhanu; Basile Gallet; Romain Monchaux; Mickaël Bourgoin; Ph. Odier; Jean-François Pinton; Nicolas Plihon; S. Fauve; Nicolas Mordant; François Pétrélis; Sébastien Aumaître; Arnaud Chiffaudel; François Daviaud; Bérengère Dubrulle; Florent Ravelet

We report the first experimental observation of a bistable dynamo regime. A turbulent flow of liquid sodium is generated between two disks in the von Karman geometry (VKS experiment). When one disk is kept at rest, bistability is observed between a stationary and an oscillatory magnetic field. The stationary and oscillatory branches occur in the vicinity of a codimension-two bifurcation that results from the coupling between two modes of magnetic field. We present an experimental study of the two regimes and study in detail the region of bistability that we understand in terms of dynamical system theory. Despite the very turbulent nature of the flow, the bifurcations of the magnetic field are correctly described by a low-dimensional model. In addition, the different regimes are robust; i.e. turbulent fluctuations do not drive any transition between the oscillatory and stationary states in the region of bistability.


Physical Review E | 2015

Disentangling inertial waves from eddy turbulence in a forced rotating-turbulence experiment

Antoine Campagne; Basile Gallet; Frédéric Moisy; Pierre-Philippe Cortet

We present a spatiotemporal analysis of a statistically stationary rotating-turbulence experiment, aiming to extract a signature of inertial waves and to determine the scales and frequencies at which they can be detected. The analysis uses two-point spatial correlations of the temporal Fourier transform of velocity fields obtained from time-resolved stereoscopic particle image velocimetry measurements in the rotating frame. We quantify the degree of anisotropy of turbulence as a function of frequency and spatial scale. We show that this space-time-dependent anisotropy is well described by the dispersion relation of linear inertial waves at large scale, while smaller scales are dominated by the sweeping of the waves by fluid motion at larger scales. This sweeping effect is mostly due to the low-frequency quasi-two-dimensional component of the turbulent flow, a prominent feature of our experiment that is not accounted for by wave-turbulence theory. These results question the relevance of this theory for rotating turbulence at the moderate Rossby numbers accessible in laboratory experiments, which are relevant to most geophysical and astrophysical flows.


Physics of Fluids | 2014

Scale-dependent cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry in a forced rotating turbulence experiment

Basile Gallet; Antoine Campagne; Pierre-Philippe Cortet; Frédéric Moisy

We characterize the statistical and geometrical properties of the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry in a statistically steady forced rotating turbulence experiment. Turbulence is generated by a set of vertical flaps which continuously inject velocity fluctuations towards the center of a tank mounted on a rotating platform. We first characterize the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry from conventional single-point vorticity statistics. We propose a phenomenological model to explain the emergence of the asymmetry in the experiment, from which we predict scaling laws for the root-mean-square velocity in good agreement with the experimental data. We further quantify the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry using a set of third-order two-point velocity correlations. We focus on the correlations which are nonzero only if the cyclone-anticyclone symmetry is broken. They offer two advantages over single-point vorticity statistics: first, they are defined from velocity measurements only, so an accurate resolution of the Kolmogoro...


Physics of Fluids | 2010

Destabilizing Taylor–Couette flow with suction

Basile Gallet; Charles R. Doering; E. A. Spiegel

We consider the effect of radial fluid injection and suction on Taylor-Couette flow. Injection at the outer cylinder and suction at the inner cylinder generally results in a linearly unstable steady spiralling flow, even for cylindrical shears that are linearly stable in the absence of a radial flux. We study nonlinear aspects of the unstable motions with the energy stability method. Our results, though specialized, may have implications for drag reduction by suction, accretion in astrophysical disks, and perhaps even in the flow in the earths polar vortex.


Physics of Fluids | 2009

Influence of an external magnetic field on forced turbulence in a swirling flow of liquid metal

Basile Gallet; Michael Berhanu; Nicolas Mordant

We report an experimental investigation on the influence of an external magnetic field on forced three-dimensional turbulence of liquid gallium in a closed vessel. We observe an exponential damping of the turbulent velocity fluctuations as a function of the interaction parameter N (ratio of Lorentz force over inertial terms of the Navier–Stokes equation). The flow structures develop some anisotropy but do not become bidimensional. From a dynamical viewpoint, the damping first occurs homogeneously over the whole spectrum of frequencies. For larger values of N, a very strong additional damping occurs at the highest frequencies. However, the injected mechanical power remains independent of the applied magnetic field. The simultaneous measurement of induced magnetic field and electrical potential differences shows a very weak correlation between magnetic field and velocity fluctuations. The observed reduction in the fluctuations is in agreement with a previously proposed mechanism for the saturation of turbul...


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2016

Turbulent drag in a rotating frame

Antoine Campagne; Frédéric Moisy; Pierre-Philippe Cortet; Nathanaël Machicoane; Basile Gallet

What is the turbulent drag force experienced by an object moving in a rotating fluid? This open and fundamental question can be addressed by measuring the torque needed to drive an impeller at constant angular velocity


EPL | 2012

Dynamo action due to spatially dependent magnetic permeability

Basile Gallet; François Pétrélis; S. Fauve

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S. Fauve

École Normale Supérieure

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Pierre-Philippe Cortet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bérengère Dubrulle

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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François Daviaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michael Berhanu

École Normale Supérieure

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Mickaël Bourgoin

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Nicolas Mordant

École Normale Supérieure

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