101 research outputs found
A note on dissipation in helical turbulence
In helical turbulence a linear cascade of helicity accompanying the energy
cascade has been suggested. Since energy and helicity have different
dimensionality we suggest the existence of a characteristic inner scale,
, for helicity dissipation in a regime of hydrodynamic fully
developed turbulence and estimate it on dimensional grounds. This scale is
always larger than the Kolmogorov scale, , and their ratio vanishes in the high Reynolds number limit, so the flow will always be
helicity free in the small scales.Comment: 2 pages, submitted to Phys. Fluid
Imbalanced Weak MHD Turbulence
MHD turbulence consists of waves that propagate along magnetic fieldlines, in
both directions. When two oppositely directed waves collide, they distort each
other, without changing their respective energies. In weak MHD turbulence, a
given wave suffers many collisions before cascading. "Imbalance" means that
more energy is going in one direction than the other. In general, MHD
turbulence is imbalanced. A number of complications arise for the imbalanced
cascade that are unimportant for the balanced one.
We solve weak MHD turbulence that is imbalanced. Of crucial importance is
that the energies going in both directions are forced to equalize at the
dissipation scale. We call this the "pinning" of the energy spectra. It affects
the entire inertial range.
Weak MHD turbulence is particularly interesting because perturbation theory
is applicable. Hence it can be described with a simple kinetic equation.
Galtier et al. (2000) derived this kinetic equation. We present a simpler, more
physical derivation, based on the picture of colliding wavepackets. In the
process, we clarify the role of the zero-frequency mode. We also explain why
Goldreich & Sridhar claimed that perturbation theory is inapplicable, and why
this claim is wrong. (Our "weak" is equivalent to Goldreich & Sridhar's
"intermediate.")
We perform numerical simulations of the kinetic equation to verify our
claims. We construct simplified model equations that illustrate the main
effects. Finally, we show that a large magnetic Prandtl number does not have a
significant effect, and that hyperviscosity leads to a pronounced bottleneck
effect.Comment: 43 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Ap
Self-sustained oscillations in homogeneous shear flow
Generation of the large-scale coherent vortical structurs in homogeneous
shear flow couples dynamical processes of energy and enstrophy production. In
the large rate of strain limit, the simple estimates of the contributions to
the energy and enstrophy equations result in a dynamical system, describing
experimentally and numerically observed self-sustained non-linear oscillations
of energy and enstrophy. It is shown that the period of these oscilaltions is
independent upon the box size and the energy and enstrophy fluctuations are
strongly correlated.Comment: 10 pages 6 figure
On the dual cascade in two-dimensional turbulence
We study the dual cascade scenario for two-dimensional turbulence driven by a
spectrally localized forcing applied over a finite wavenumber range
[k_\min,k_\max] (with k_\min > 0) such that the respective energy and
enstrophy injection rates and satisfy
k_\min^2\epsilon\le\eta\le k_\max^2\epsilon. The classical
Kraichnan--Leith--Batchelor paradigm, based on the simultaneous conservation of
energy and enstrophy and the scale-selectivity of the molecular viscosity,
requires that the domain be unbounded in both directions. For two-dimensional
turbulence either in a doubly periodic domain or in an unbounded channel with a
periodic boundary condition in the across-channel direction, a direct enstrophy
cascade is not possible. In the usual case where the forcing wavenumber is no
greater than the geometric mean of the integral and dissipation wavenumbers,
constant spectral slopes must satisfy and , where
() is the asymptotic slope of the range of wavenumbers lower
(higher) than the forcing wavenumber. The influence of a large-scale
dissipation on the realizability of a dual cascade is analyzed. We discuss the
consequences for numerical simulations attempting to mimic the classical
unbounded picture in a bounded domain.Comment: 22 pages, to appear in Physica
Effects of forcing in three dimensional turbulent flows
We present the results of a numerical investigation of three-dimensional
homogeneous and isotropic turbulence, stirred by a random forcing with a power
law spectrum, . Numerical simulations are performed at
different resolutions up to . We show that at varying the spectrum slope
, small-scale turbulent fluctuations change from a {\it forcing independent}
to a {\it forcing dominated} statistics. We argue that the critical value
separating the two behaviours, in three dimensions, is . When the
statistics is forcing dominated, for , we find dimensional scaling, i.e.
intermittency is vanishingly small. On the other hand, for , we find the
same anomalous scaling measured in flows forced only at large scales. We
connect these results with the issue of {\it universality} in turbulent flows.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Kolmogorov turbulence in a random-force-driven Burgers equation
The dynamics of velocity fluctuations, governed by the one-dimensional
Burgers equation, driven by a white-in-time random force with the spatial
spectrum \overline{|f(k)|^2}\proptok^{-1}, is considered. High-resolution
numerical experiments conducted in this work give the energy spectrum
with . The observed two-point
correlation function reveals with the
"dynamical exponent" . High-order moments of velocity differences
show strong intermittency and are dominated by powerful large-scale shocks. The
results are compared with predictions of the one-loop renormalized perturbation
expansion.Comment: 13 LaTeX pages, psfig.sty macros, Phys. Rev. E 51, R2739 (1995)
Ultimate-state scaling in a shell model for homogeneous turbulent convection
An interesting question in turbulent convection is how the heat transport
depends on the strength of thermal forcing in the limit of very large thermal
forcing. Kraichnan predicted [Phys. Fluids {\bf 5}, 1374 (1962)] that the heat
transport measured by the Nusselt number (Nu) would depend on the strength of
thermal forcing measured by the Rayleigh number (Ra) as Nu Ra
with possible logarithmic corrections at very high Ra. This scaling behavior is
taken as a signature of the so-called ultimate state of turbulent convection.
The ultimate state was interpreted in the Grossmann-Lohse (GL) theory [J. Fluid
Mech. {\bf 407}, 27 (2000)] as a bulk-dominated state in which both the kinetic
and thermal dissipation are dominated by contributions from the bulk of the
flow with the boundary layers either broken down or playing no role in the heat
transport. In this paper, we study the dependence of Nu and the Reynolds number
(Re) measuring the root-mean-squared velocity fluctuations on Ra and the
Prandtl number (Pr) using a shell model for homogeneous turbulent convection
where buoyancy is acting directly on most of the scales. We find that Nu
RaPr and Re RaPr, which resemble the
ultimate-state scaling behavior for fluids with moderate Pr, but the presence
of a drag acting on the large scales is crucial in giving rise to such scaling.
This suggests that if buoyancy acts on most of the scales in the bulk of
turbulent convection at very high Ra, then the ultimate state cannot be a
bulk-dominated state
Inertial- and Dissipation-Range Asymptotics in Fluid Turbulence
We propose and verify a wave-vector-space version of generalized extended
self similarity and broaden its applicability to uncover intriguing, universal
scaling in the far dissipation range by computing high-order (\leq 20\/)
structure functions numerically for: (1) the three-dimensional, incompressible
Navier Stokes equation (with and without hyperviscosity); and (2) the GOY shell
model for turbulence. Also, in case (2), with Taylor-microscale Reynolds
numbers 4 \times 10^{4} \leq Re_{\lambda} \leq 3 \times 10^{6}\/, we find
that the inertial-range exponents (\zeta_{p}\/) of the order - p\/
structure functions do not approach their Kolmogorov value p/3\/ as
Re_{\lambda}\/ increases.Comment: RevTeX file, with six postscript figures. epsf.tex macro is used for
figure insertion. Packaged using the 'uufiles' utilit
Manifestation of anisotropy persistence in the hierarchies of MHD scaling exponents
The first example of a turbulent system where the failure of the hypothesis
of small-scale isotropy restoration is detectable both in the `flattening' of
the inertial-range scaling exponent hierarchy, and in the behavior of odd-order
dimensionless ratios, e.g., skewness and hyperskewness, is presented.
Specifically, within the kinematic approximation in magnetohydrodynamical
turbulence, we show that for compressible flows, the isotropic contribution to
the scaling of magnetic correlation functions and the first anisotropic ones
may become practically indistinguishable. Moreover, skewness factor now
diverges as the P\'eclet number goes to infinity, a further indication of
small-scale anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages Latex, 1 figur
Scaling properties of three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence
The scaling properties of three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence
are obtained from direct numerical simulations of decaying turbulence using
modes. The results indicate that the turbulence does not follow the
Iroshnikov-Kraichnan phenomenology.In the case of hyperresistivity, the
structure functions exhibit a clear scaling range yielding absolute values of
the scaling exponents . The scaling exponents agree with a modified
She-Leveque model , corresponding to Kolmogorov
scaling but sheet-like geometry of the dissipative structures
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