S. Ravichandran
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by S. Ravichandran.
Physics of Fluids | 2015
S. Ravichandran; Rama Govindarajan
We study the formation of caustics in vortex-dominated \flows. We \find that only particles starting within a critical distance of a vortex which scales as the square roots of the particle inertia and the circulation can form sling caustics. We show that particles starting in an annular region around this critical radius contribute the densest clusters in the \flow. The large density spikes occurring for such particles, even at small inertia, are indicative that these particles will experience large collision rates.
Physics of Fluids | 2014
S. Ravichandran; Prasad Perlekar; Rama Govindarajan
We study the behavior of heavy inertial particles in the flow field of two like-signed vortices. In a frame co-rotating with the two vortices, we find that stable fixed points exist for these heavy inertial particles; these stable frame-fixed points exist only for particle Stokes number St < Stcr. We estimate Stcr and compare this with direct numerical simulations, and find that the addition of viscosity increases the Stcr slightly. We find that the rate at which particles fall into the fixed points increases until the fixed points disappear at St = Stcr. These frame-fixed points are between fixed points and limit cycles in character.
Physical Review E | 2016
Rohith V. Swaminathan; S. Ravichandran; Prasad Perlekar; Rama Govindarajan
The merger of two like-signed vortices is a well-studied problem, but in a turbulent flow, we may often have more than two like-signed vortices interacting. We study the merger of three or more identical corotating vortices initially arranged on the vertices of a regular polygon. At low to moderate Reynolds numbers, we find an additional stage in the merger process, absent in the merger of two vortices, where an annular vortical structure is formed and is long lived. Vortex merger is slowed down significantly due to this. Such annular vortices are known at far higher Reynolds numbers in studies of tropical cyclones, which have been noticed to a break down into individual vortices. In the preannular stage, vortical structures in a viscous flow are found here to tilt and realign in a manner similar to the inviscid case, but the pronounced filaments visible in the latter are practically absent in the former. Five or fewer vortices initially elongate radially, and then reorient their long axis closer to the azimuthal direction so as to form an annulus. With six or more vortices, the initial alignment is already azimuthal. Interestingly at higher Reynolds numbers, the merger of an odd number of vortices is found to proceed very differently from that of an even number. The former process is rapid and chaotic whereas the latter proceeds more slowly via pairing events. The annular vortex takes the form of a generalized Lamb-Oseen vortex (GLO), and diffuses inward until it forms a standard Lamb-Oseen vortex. For lower Reynolds number, the numerical (fully nonlinear) evolution of the GLO vortex follows exactly the analytical evolution until merger. At higher Reynolds numbers, the annulus goes through instabilities whose nonlinear stages show a pronounced difference between even and odd mode disturbances. Here again, the odd mode causes an early collapse of the annulus via decaying turbulence into a single central vortex, whereas the even mode disturbance causes a more orderly progression into a single vortex. Results from linear stability analysis agree with the nonlinear simulations, and predict the frequencies of the most unstable modes better than they predict the growth rates. It is hoped that the present findings, that multiple vortex merger is qualitatively different from the merger of two vortices, will motivate studies on how multiple vortex interactions affect the inverse cascade in two-dimensional turbulence.
Sadhana-academy Proceedings in Engineering Sciences | 2017
S. Ravichandran; P Deepu; Rama Govindarajan
Physical Review Fluids | 2017
S. Ravichandran; Harish N. Dixit; Rama Govindarajan
Resonance | 2017
Rama Govindarajan; S. Ravichandran
Physical Review Fluids | 2017
P Deepu; S. Ravichandran; Rama Govindarajan
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
S. Ravichandran; Rama Govindarajan
Physical Review Letters | 2016
S. Ravichandran; Prasad Perlekar; Rama Govindarajan; Rohith V. Swaminathan
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Rama Govindarajan; S. Ravichandran; Samriddhi Sankar Ray; P Deepu
Collaboration
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Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research
View shared research outputsJawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research
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