106 research outputs found
Cascades and Dissipative Anomalies in Nearly Collisionless Plasma Turbulence
We develop first-principles theory of kinetic plasma turbulence governed by
the Vlasov-Maxwell-Landau equations in the limit of vanishing collision rates.
Following an exact renormalization-group approach pioneered by Onsager, we
demonstrate the existence of a "collisionless range" of scales (lengths and
velocities) in 1-particle phase space where the ideal Vlasov-Maxwell equations
are satisfied in a "coarse-grained sense". Entropy conservation may
nevertheless be violated in that range by a "dissipative anomaly" due to
nonlinear entropy cascade. We derive "4/5th-law" type expressions for the
entropy flux, which allow us to characterize the singularities
(structure-function scaling exponents) required for its non-vanishing.
Conservation laws of mass, momentum and energy are not afflicted with anomalous
transfers in the collisionless limit. In a subsequent limit of small gyroradii,
however, anomalous contributions to inertial-range energy balance may appear
due both to cascade of bulk energy and to turbulent redistribution of internal
energy in phase space. In that same limit the "generalized Ohm's law" derived
from the particle momentum balances reduces to an "ideal Ohm's law", but only
in a coarse-grained sense that does not imply magnetic flux-freezing and that
permits magnetic reconnection at all inertial-range scales. We compare our
results with prior theory based on the gyrokinetic (high gyro-frequency) limit,
with numerical simulations, and with spacecraft measurements of the solar wind
and terrestrial magnetosphere.Comment: Several additions have been made that were requested by the referees
of the PRX submission. In particular, discussion previously relegated to
Supplemental Materials are now included in the main text as appendice
A Turbulent Constitutive Law for the Two-Dimensional Inverse Energy Cascade
We develop a fundamental approach to a turbulent constitutive law for the 2D
inverse cascade, based upon a convergent multi-scale gradient (MSG) expansion.
To first order in gradients we find that the turbulent stress generated by
small-scale eddies is proportional not to strain but instead to `skew-strain,'
i.e. the strain tensor rotated by The skew-strain from a given
scale of motion makes no contribution to energy flux across eddies at that
scale, so that the inverse cascade cannot be strongly scale-local. We show that
this conclusion extends a result of Kraichnan for spectral transfer and is due
to absence of vortex-stretching in 2D. This `weakly local' mechanism of inverse
cascade requires a relative rotation between the principal directions of strain
at different scales and we argue for this using both the dynamical equations of
motion and also a heuristic model of `thinning' of small-scale vortices by an
imposed large-scale strain. Carrying out our expansion to second-order in
gradients, we find two additional terms in the stress that can contribute to
energy cascade. The first is a Newtonian stress with an `eddy-viscosity' due to
differential strain-rotation, and the second is a tensile stress exerted along
vorticity contour-lines. The latter was anticipated by Kraichnan for a very
special model situation of small-scale vortex wave-packets in a uniform strain
field. We prove a proportionality in 2D between the mean rates of differential
strain-rotation and of vorticity-gradient stretching, analogous to a similar
relation of Betchov for 3D. According to this result the second-order stresses
will also contribute to inverse cascade when, as is plausible, vorticity
contour-lines lengthen on average by turbulent advection.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figur
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