85 research outputs found
An improved \eps expansion for three-dimensional turbulence: two-loop renormalization near two dimensions
An improved \eps expansion in the -dimensional () stochastic
theory of turbulence is constructed at two-loop order which incorporates the
effect of pole singularities at in coefficients of the \eps
expansion of universal quantities. For a proper account of the effect of these
singularities two different approaches to the renormalization of the powerlike
correlation function of the random force are analyzed near two dimensions. By
direct calculation it is shown that the approach based on the mere
renormalization of the nonlocal correlation function leads to contradictions at
two-loop order. On the other hand, a two-loop calculation in the
renormalization scheme with the addition to the force correlation function of a
local term to be renormalized instead of the nonlocal one yields consistent
results in accordance with the UV renormalization theory. The latter
renormalization prescription is used for the two-loop renormalization-group
analysis amended with partial resummation of the pole singularities near two
dimensions leading to a significant improvement of the agreement with
experimental results for the Kolmogorov constant.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figure
Anomalous scaling of a passive scalar advected by the Navier--Stokes velocity field: Two-loop approximation
The field theoretic renormalization group and operator product expansion are
applied to the model of a passive scalar quantity advected by a non-Gaussian
velocity field with finite correlation time. The velocity is governed by the
Navier--Stokes equation, subject to an external random stirring force with the
correlation function . It is shown that
the scalar field is intermittent already for small , its structure
functions display anomalous scaling behavior, and the corresponding exponents
can be systematically calculated as series in . The practical
calculation is accomplished to order (two-loop approximation),
including anisotropic sectors. Like for the well-known Kraichnan's rapid-change
model, the anomalous scaling results from the existence in the model of
composite fields (operators) with negative scaling dimensions, identified with
the anomalous exponents. Thus the mechanism of the origin of anomalous scaling
appears similar for the Gaussian model with zero correlation time and
non-Gaussian model with finite correlation time. It should be emphasized that,
in contrast to Gaussian velocity ensembles with finite correlation time, the
model and the perturbation theory discussed here are manifestly Galilean
covariant. The relevance of these results for the real passive advection,
comparison with the Gaussian models and experiments are briefly discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
Pressure and intermittency in passive vector turbulence
We investigate the scaling properties a model of passive vector turbulence
with pressure and in the presence of a large-scale anisotropy. The leading
scaling exponents of the structure functions are proven to be anomalous. The
anisotropic exponents are organized in hierarchical families growing without
bound with the degree of anisotropy. Nonlocality produces poles in the
inertial-range dynamics corresponding to the dimensional scaling solution. The
increase with the P\'{e}clet number of hyperskewness and higher odd-dimensional
ratios signals the persistence of anisotropy effects also in the inertial
range.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Renormalization-group approach to the stochastic Navier--Stokes equation: Two-loop approximation
The field theoretic renormalization group is applied to the stochastic
Navier--Stokes equation that describes fully developed fluid turbulence. The
complete two-loop calculation of the renormalization constant, the
function, the fixed point and the ultraviolet correction exponent is performed.
The Kolmogorov constant and the inertial-range skewness factor, derived to
second order of the \eps expansion, are in a good agreement with the
experiment. The possibility of the extrapolation of the \eps expansion beyond
the threshold where the sweeping effects become important is demonstrated on
the example of a Galilean-invariant quantity, the equal-time pair correlation
function of the velocity field. The extension to the -dimensional case is
briefly discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Stability of -vector model: four-loop expansion study
The stability of -symmetric fixed point regarding the presence of
vector-field term () in the field
theory is analyzed. For this purpose, the four-loop renormalization group
expansions in within Minimal Subtraction (MS) scheme are
obtained. This frequently neglected term in the action requires a detailed and
accurate study on the issue of existing of new fixed points and their
stability, that can lead to the possible change of the corresponding
universality class. We found that within lower order of perturbation theory the
only -symmetric fixed point exists but the
corresponding positive value of stability exponent is tiny. This led
us to analyze this constant in higher orders of perturbation theory by
calculating the 4-loop contributions to the expansion for
, that should be enough to infer positivity or negativity of this
exponent. The value turned out to be undoubtedly positive, although still small
even in higher loops: . These results cause that the corresponding
vector term should be neglected in the action when analyzing the critical
behaviour of -symmetric model. At the same time, the small value of the
shows that the corresponding corrections to the critical scaling are
significant in a wide range
Stability of scaling regimes in developed turbulence with weak anisotropy
The fully developed turbulence with weak anisotropy is investigated by means
of renormalization group approach (RG) and double expansion regularization for
dimensions . Some modification of the standard minimal substraction
scheme has been used to analyze stability of the Kolmogorov scaling regime
which is governed by the renormalization group fixed point. This fixed point is
unstable at ; thus, the infinitesimally weak anisotropy destroyes above
scaling regime in two-dimensional space. The restoration of the stability of
this fixed point, under transition from to has been demonstrated
at borderline dimension . The results are in qualitative agreement
with ones obtained recently in the framework of the usual analytical
regularization scheme.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figure
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