1,691 research outputs found
Predictability of the energy cascade in 2D turbulence
The predictability problem in the inverse energy cascade of two-dimensional
turbulence is addressed by means of direct numerical simulations. The growth
rate as a function of the error level is determined by means of a finite size
extension of the Lyapunov exponent. For error within the inertial range, the
linear growth of the error energy, predicted by dimensional argument, is
verified with great accuracy. Our numerical findings are in close agreement
with the result of TFM closure approximation.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Chaos and predictability of homogeneous-isotropic turbulence
We study the chaoticity and the predictability of a turbulent flow on the
basis of high-resolution direct numerical simulations at different Reynolds
numbers. We find that the Lyapunov exponent of turbulence, which measures the
exponential separation of two initially close solution of the Navier-Stokes
equations, grows with the Reynolds number of the flow, with an anomalous
scaling exponent, larger than the one obtained on dimensional grounds. For
large perturbations, the error is transferred to larger, slower scales where it
grows algebraically generating an "inverse cascade" of perturbations in the
inertial range. In this regime our simulations confirm the classical
predictions based on closure models of turbulence. We show how to link
chaoticity and predictability of a turbulent flow in terms of a finite size
extension of the Lyapunov exponent.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Turbulent channel without boundaries: The periodic Kolmogorov flow
The Kolmogorov flow provides an ideal instance of a virtual channel flow: It
has no boundaries, but nevertheless it possesses well defined mean flow in each
half-wavelength. We exploit this remarkable feature for the purpose of
investigating the interplay between the mean flow and the turbulent drag of the
bulk flow. By means of a set of direct numerical simulations at increasing
Reynolds number we show the dependence of the bulk turbulent drag on the
amplitude of the mean flow. Further, we present a detailed analysis of the
scale-by-scale energy balance, which describes how kinetic energy is
redistributed among different regions of the flow while being transported
toward small dissipative scales. Our results allow us to obtain an accurate
prediction for the spatial energy transport at large scales.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Introduction to chaos and diffusion
This contribution is relative to the opening lectures of the ISSAOS 2001
summer school and it has the aim to provide the reader with some concepts and
techniques concerning chaotic dynamics and transport processes in fluids. Our
intention is twofold: to give a self-consistent introduction to chaos and
diffusion, and to offer a guide for the reading of the rest of this volume.Comment: 39 page
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