Conditions for Cloud Settling and Rayleigh-Taylor Instability

2002 
Most aerosol motion can be analyzed by individual particle motion or by the motion of the suspending gas. There are, however, two related situations in which an aerosol can exhibit bulk motion: cloud settling and Rayleigh-Taylor instability. In both cases, the aerosol particles move faster as a cloud than they do as individual particles. In the case of cloud settling, the aerosol is usually a spheroidal cloud surrounded by clean air. Rayleigh-Taylor instability occurs when a dense aerosol layer overlies a layer of clean air. This instability is characterized by abrupt breakthrough of the aerosol layer into the clean air layer at multiple points. High-concentration, submicrometer test aerosols were generated in two experimental systems that permitted observation of the transition from particle-dominated motion to cloud, or bulk, dominated motion and measurement of cloud settling velocities and characteristics. In both systems aerosol concentration could be controlled over two orders of magnitude. One syste...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    12
    References
    13
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []