Bulletin of the American Physical Society
77th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics
Sunday–Tuesday, November 24–26, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah
Session A11: Nonlinear Dynamics: Coherent Structures
8:00 AM–9:57 AM,
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Room: 155 A
Chair: Tobias Schneider, EPFL
Abstract: A11.00005 : Coherent structure interactions driven by excited hidden modes
8:52 AM–9:05 AM
Presenter:
Marc Pradas
(Open University)
Authors:
Marc Pradas
(Open University)
Alexander Round
(The Open University)
Te-Sheng Lin
(National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University)
Dmitri Tseluiko
(Loughborough University)
Serafim Kalliadasis
(Imperial College London)
Several studies have looked into the dynamics and interactions of pulses. The basic idea is to assume a superposition of interacting pulses, allowing for a "multiparticle description" of the system. However, previous analyses, including our own, focused on weakly interacting pulses, and little is known about dynamic states characterized by strongly interacting pulses, a challenging problem. The purpose of this work is precisely to analyze and quantify strong interactions between coherent structures in falling films. In this direction, we put forward a new coherent structure interaction framework encompassing both strong and weak interactions, underpinning also the previous theories on weak interaction. Specifically, we show that under some conditions a system of two pulses undergoes a transition from a regime of decaying oscillatory dynamics to self-sustained oscillations. Detailed examination of this transition shows that it is governed by a novel mechanism---a peculiar and unusual Hopf bifurcation in which a hidden complex conjugate resonance pair crosses the imaginary axis in the complex plane. We show that such a resonance pair results from the splitting of the resonance pole of the single-pulse system. This is a hidden object that is not part of the spectrum of the linearised operator, and only becomes visible when using appropriate weighted functional spaces. Spectral properties similar to those of the falling film problem, responsible for the existence of resonance poles, are prevalent in a wide class of active-dissipative systems, ranging from fluid dynamics to reaction-diffusion systems.
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