- Series
- Applied and Computational Mathematics Seminar
- Time
- Monday, December 7, 2015 - 2:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Professor Jun Zhang – Courant Institute
- Organizer
- Martin Short
Thermal convection is ubiquitous in nature. It spans from a small
cup of tea to the internal dynamics of the earth. In this talk, I
will discuss a few experiments where boundaries to the fluid play
surprising roles in changing the behaviors of a classical Rayleigh-
Bénard convection system. In one, mobile boundaries lead to
regular large-scale oscillations that involve the entire system.
This could be related to the continental kinetics on earth over
the past two billion years, as super-continents formed and
broke apart in cyclic fashion. In another experiment, we found that
seemingly impeding partitions in thermal convection can boost the
overall heat transport by several folds, once the partitions are
properly arranged, thanks to an unexpected symmetry-breaking
bifurcation.