Pattern study of thermal phase separation for binary fluid mixtures

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present numerical results about phase separation of binary fluid mixtures quenched by contact with cold walls. Design/methodology/approach - The thermal phase separation is simulated by using a hybrid lattice Boltzmann method that solves the continuity and the Navier-Stokes equations. The equations for energy and concentration are solved by using a finite-difference scheme. This approach provides a complete description of the thermo-hydrodynamic effects in the mixture.

Rotational behaviour of red blood cells in suspension: a mesoscale simulation study

The nature of blood as a suspension of red blood cells makes computational haemodynamics a demanding task. Our coarse-grained blood model, which builds on a lattice Boltzmann method for soft particle suspensions, enables the study of the collective behaviour of the order of 10(6) cells in suspension. After demonstrating the viscosity measurement in Kolmogorov flow, we focus on the statistical analysis of the cell orientation and rotation in Couette flow. We quantify the average inclination with respect to the flow and the nematic order as a function of shear rate and haematocrit.

Numerical simulations of Rayleigh-Taylor front evolution in turbulent stratified fluids

We present state-of-the-art numerical simulations of a two-dimensional Rayleigh-Taylor instability for a compressible stratified fluid. We describe the computational algorithm and its implementation on the QPACE supercomputer. High resolution enables the statistical properties of the evolving interface that we characterize in terms of its fractal dimension to be studied.

Beyond classical consensus clustering: the Least Squares approach to multiple solutions

Clustering is one of the most important unsupervised learning problems and it consists of finding a common structure in a collection of unlabeled data. However, due to the ill-posed nature of the problem, different runs of the same clustering algorithm applied to the same data-set usually produce different solutions. In this scenario choosing a single solution is quite arbitrary. On the other hand, in many applications the problem of multiple solutions becomes intractable, hence it is often more desirable to provide a limited group of ''good'' clusterings rather than a single solution.

Second-order closure in stratified turbulence: Simulations and modeling of bulk and entrainment regions

The parametrization of small-scale turbulent fluctuations in convective systems and in the presence of strong stratification is a key issue for many applied problems in oceanography, atmospheric science, and planetology. In the presence of stratification, one needs to cope with bulk turbulent fluctuations and with inversion regions, where temperature, density, or both develop highly nonlinear mean profiles due to the interactions between the turbulent boundary layer and the unmixed-stable-flow above or below it.