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Axisymmetric fountains in stratified environments rise until reaching a maximum height, where the vertical momentum vanishes, and then falls and spread radially as an annular plume following a well-known top-hat profile. Here, firstly, we generalize the model of Morton et al. (Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A textbf{234}, 1, 1956), in order to correctly determine the dependence of the maximum height and the spreading height with the parameters involved. We obtain the critical conditions for the collapse of the fountain, textit i.e. when the jet falls up to the source level, and show that the spreading height must be expressed as a function of at least two parameters. To improve the quantitative agreement with the experiments we modify the criterion to take the mixing process in the down flow into account. Numerical simulations were implemented to estimate the parameter values that characterizes this merging. We show that our generalized model agrees very well with the experimental measurements.
A simple theory, based on observations of snowflake distribution in a turbulent flow, is proposed to model the growth of inertial particles as a result of dynamic clustering at scales larger than the Kolmogorov length scale. Particles able to stick o
Imbibition plays a central role in diverse energy, environmental, and industrial processes. In many cases, the medium has multiple parallel strata of different permeabilities; however, how this stratification impacts imbibition is poorly understood.
The Lagrangian (LA) and Eulerian Acceleration (EA) properties of fluid particles in homogeneous turbulence with uniform shear and uniform stable stratification are studied using direct numerical simulations. The Richardson number is varied from $Ri=0
Boundary-layer transition triggered by a roughness element generates a turbulent wedge that spreads laterally as the flow proceeds downstream. The spreading half angle is about $6^{circ}$ in zero-pressure-gradient flows regardless of Reynolds number
Stratified turbulence shows scale- and direction-dependent anisotropy and the coexistence of weak turbulence of internal gravity waves and strong turbulence of eddies. Straightforward application of standard analyses developed in isotropic turbulence