The study of the smallest scales of turbulence by (Lagrangian) particle tracking faces two major challenges: the requirement of a 2D or 3D optical imaging system with sufficiently high spatial and temporal resolution and the need for particles that behave as passive tracers when seeded into the flow. While recent advances in the past decade have led to the development of fast cameras, there is still a lack of suitable methods to seed cryogenic liquid helium flows with mono-disperse particles of sufficiently small size, of the order of a few micrometers, and a density close enough to that of helium. Taking advantage of the surface tension, we propose two different techniques to generate controlled liquid spherical droplets of deuterium over a liquid helium bath.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on a new method for realizing an exceptionally strong inertial confinement of a gas in a liquid: A centimetric spherical bubble filled with a reactive gaseous mixture in a liquid is expanded by an exothermic chemical reaction whose products condense in the liquid at the bubble wall. Hence, the cavity formed in this way is essentially empty as it collapses. The temperatures reached at maximum compression, inferred from the cavity radius dynamics and further confirmed by spectroscopic measurements exceed 20 000 K.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2013
The Brownian motion of a microscopic particle in a fluid is one of the cornerstones of statistical physics and the paradigm of a random process. One of the most powerful tools to quantify it was provided by Langevin, who explicitly accounted for a short-time correlated "thermal" force. The Langevin picture predicts ballistic motion,