Majda's model

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Majda's model is a qualitative model (in mathematical physics) introduced by Andrew Majda in 1981 for the study of interactions in the combustion theory of shock waves and explosive chemical reactions.[1]

The following definitions are with respect to a Cartesian coordinate system with 2 variables. For functions u(x,t), z(x,t) of one spatial variable x representing the Lagrangian specification of the fluid flow field and the time variable t, functions f(w), ϕ(w) of one variable w, and positive constants k,q,B, the Majda model is a pair of coupled partial differential equations:[2]

u(x,t)t+qz(x,t)t+f(u(x,t))x=B2u(x,t)x2
z(x,t)t=kϕ(u(x,t))z(x,t)[2]
the unknown function u=u(x,t) is a lumped variable, a scalar variable formed from a complicated nonlinear average of various aspects of density, velocity, and temperature in the exploding gas;
the unknown function z=z(x,t)[0,1] is the mass fraction in a simple one-step chemical reaction scheme;
the given flux function f=f(w) is a nonlinear convex function;
the given ignition function ϕ=ϕ(w) is the starter for the chemical reaction scheme;
k is the constant reaction rate;
q is the constant heat release;
B is the constant diffusivity.[2]

Template:Blockquote

References

Template:Reflist


Template:Explosive-stub