Heat Rises: 100 Years of Rayleigh-Bénard Convection (Rouse Ball Lecture)
- 👤 Speaker: Professor Charles Doering (University of Michigan) 🔗 Website
- 📅 Date & Time: Tuesday 02 May 2017, 12:00 - 13:00
- 📍 Venue: Room 3, Mill Lane Lecture Rooms, 8 Mill Lane, Cambridge
Abstract
Buoyancy forces result from density variations, often due to temperature variations, in the presence of gravity. Buoyancy-driven fluid flows shape the weather, ocean and atmosphere dynamics, the climate, and the structure of the earth and stars. In 1916 Lord Rayleigh published a paper entitled “On Convection Currents in a Horizontal Layer of Fluid, when the Higher Temperature is on the Under Side” introducing the minimal mathematical model of buoyancy-driven fluid flow now known as Rayleigh-Bénard convection. For a century this model has served as a primary paradigm of complex nonlinear dynamics displaying spontaneous symmetry breaking and pattern formation, chaos and turbulence. Here we describe progress and challenges for the analysis of Rayleigh’s model in the strongly nonlinear regime of turbulent convection.
This lecture is intended to be accessible to all, including undergraduates, who are very welcome to attend.
Series This talk is part of the Rouse Ball Lectures series.
Included in Lists
- All CMS events
- All Talks (aka the CURE list)
- bld31
- CMS Events
- DPMMS info aggregator
- Faculty of Mathematics Lectures
- Guy Emerson's list
- Hanchen DaDaDash
- Interested Talks
- Room 3, Mill Lane Lecture Rooms, 8 Mill Lane, Cambridge
- Rouse Ball Lectures
- School of Physical Sciences
- SJC Regular Seminars
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)

Professor Charles Doering (University of Michigan) 
Tuesday 02 May 2017, 12:00-13:00