147 research outputs found
Shell-crossing in quasi-one-dimensional flow
Blow-up of solutions for the cosmological fluid equations, often dubbed
shell-crossing or orbit crossing, denotes the breakdown of the single-stream
regime of the cold-dark-matter fluid. At this instant, the velocity becomes
multi-valued and the density singular. Shell-crossing is well understood in one
dimension (1D), but not in higher dimensions. This paper is about
quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) flow that depends on all three coordinates but
differs only slightly from a strictly 1D flow, thereby allowing a perturbative
treatment of shell-crossing using the Euler--Poisson equations written in
Lagrangian coordinates. The signature of shell-crossing is then just the
vanishing of the Jacobian of the Lagrangian map, a regular perturbation
problem. In essence the problem of the first shell-crossing, which is highly
singular in Eulerian coordinates, has been desingularized by switching to
Lagrangian coordinates, and can then be handled by perturbation theory. Here,
all-order recursion relations are obtained for the time-Taylor coefficients of
the displacement field, and it is shown that the Taylor series has an infinite
radius of convergence. This allows the determination of the time and location
of the first shell-crossing, which is generically shown to be taking place
earlier than for the unperturbed 1D flow. The time variable used for these
statements is not the cosmic time but the linear growth time . For simplicity, calculations are restricted to an Einstein--de Sitter
universe in the Newtonian approximation, and tailored initial data are used.
However it is straightforward to relax these limitations, if needed.Comment: 9 pages; received 2017 May 24, and accepted 2017 June 21 at MNRA
A constructive approach to regularity of Lagrangian trajectories for incompressible Euler flow in a bounded domain
The 3D incompressible Euler equation is an important research topic in the
mathematical study of fluid dynamics. Not only is the global regularity for
smooth initial data an open issue, but the behaviour may also depend on the
presence or absence of boundaries.
For a good understanding, it is crucial to carry out, besides mathematical
studies, high-accuracy and well-resolved numerical exploration. Such studies
can be very demanding in computational resources, but recently it has been
shown that very substantial gains can be achieved first, by using Cauchy's
Lagrangian formulation of the Euler equations and second, by taking advantages
of analyticity results of the Lagrangian trajectories for flows whose initial
vorticity is H\"older-continuous. The latter has been known for about twenty
years (Serfati, 1995), but the combination of the two, which makes use of
recursion relations among time-Taylor coefficients to obtain constructively the
time-Taylor series of the Lagrangian map, has been achieved only recently
(Frisch and Zheligovsky, 2014; Podvigina {\em et al.}, 2016 and references
therein).
Here we extend this methodology to incompressible Euler flow in an
impermeable bounded domain whose boundary may be either analytic or have a
regularity between indefinite differentiability and analyticity.
Non-constructive regularity results for these cases have already been obtained
by Glass {\em et al.} (2012). Using the invariance of the boundary under the
Lagrangian flow, we establish novel recursion relations that include
contributions from the boundary. This leads to a constructive proof of
time-analyticity of the Lagrangian trajectories with analytic boundaries, which
can then be used subsequently for the design of a very high-order
Cauchy--Lagrangian method.Comment: 18 pages, no figure
Cauchy's almost forgotten Lagrangian formulation of the Euler equation for 3D incompressible flow
Two prized papers, one by Augustin Cauchy in 1815, presented to the French
Academy and the other by Hermann Hankel in 1861, presented to G\"ottingen
University, contain major discoveries on vorticity dynamics whose impact is now
quickly increasing. Cauchy found a Lagrangian formulation of 3D ideal
incompressible flow in terms of three invariants that generalize to three
dimensions the now well-known law of conservation of vorticity along fluid
particle trajectories for two-dimensional flow. This has very recently been
used to prove analyticity in time of fluid particle trajectories for 3D
incompressible Euler flow and can be extended to compressible flow, in
particular to cosmological dark matter. Hankel showed that Cauchy's formulation
gives a very simple Lagrangian derivation of the Helmholtz vorticity-flux
invariants and, in the middle of the proof, derived an intermediate result
which is the conservation of the circulation of the velocity around a closed
contour moving with the fluid. This circulation theorem was to be rediscovered
independently by William Thomson (Kelvin) in 1869. Cauchy's invariants were
only occasionally cited in the 19th century --- besides Hankel, foremost by
George Stokes and Maurice L\'evy --- and even less so in the 20th until they
were rediscovered via Emmy Noether's theorem in the late 1960, but reattributed
to Cauchy only at the end of the 20th century by Russian scientists.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, EPJ H (history), in pres
How smooth are particle trajectories in a CDM Universe?
It is shown here that in a flat, cold dark matter (CDM) dominated Universe
with positive cosmological constant (), modelled in terms of a
Newtonian and collisionless fluid, particle trajectories are analytical in time
(representable by a convergent Taylor series) until at least a finite time
after decoupling. The time variable used for this statement is the cosmic scale
factor, i.e., the "-time", and not the cosmic time. For this, a
Lagrangian-coordinates formulation of the Euler-Poisson equations is employed,
originally used by Cauchy for 3-D incompressible flow. Temporal analyticity for
CDM is found to be a consequence of novel explicit all-order recursion
relations for the -time Taylor coefficients of the Lagrangian displacement
field, from which we derive the convergence of the -time Taylor series. A
lower bound for the -time where analyticity is guaranteed and shell-crossing
is ruled out is obtained, whose value depends only on and on the
initial spatial smoothness of the density field. The largest time interval is
achieved when vanishes, i.e., for an Einstein-de Sitter universe.
Analyticity holds also if, instead of the -time, one uses the linear
structure growth -time, but no simple recursion relations are then obtained.
The analyticity result also holds when a curvature term is included in the
Friedmann equation for the background, but inclusion of a radiation term
arising from the primordial era spoils analyticity.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, published in MNRAS, this paper introduces a
convergent formulation of Lagrangian perturbation theory for LCD
Genesis of d'Alembert's paradox and analytical elaboration of the drag problem
We show that the issue of the drag exerted by an incompressible fluid on a
body in uniform motion has played a major role in the early development of
fluid dynamics. In 1745 Euler came close, technically, to proving the vanishing
of the drag for a body of arbitrary shape; for this he exploited and
significantly extended existing ideas on decomposing the flow into thin
fillets; he did not however have a correct picture of the global structure of
the flow around a body. Borda in 1766 showed that the principle of live forces
implied the vanishing of the drag and should thus be inapplicable to the
problem. After having at first refused the possibility of a vanishing drag,
d'Alembert in 1768 established the paradox, but only for bodies with a
head-tail symmetry. A full understanding of the paradox, as due to the neglect
of viscous forces, had to wait until the work of Saint-Venant in 1846.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Physica D, in pres
Extended Self Similarity works for the Burgers equation and why
Extended Self-Similarity (ESS), a procedure that remarkably extends the range
of scaling for structure functions in Navier--Stokes turbulence and thus allows
improved determination of intermittency exponents, has never been fully
explained. We show that ESS applies to Burgers turbulence at high Reynolds
numbers and we give the theoretical explanation of the numerically observed
improved scaling at both the infrared and ultraviolet end, in total a gain of
about three quarters of a decade: there is a reduction of subdominant
contributions to scaling when going from the standard structure function
representation to the ESS representation. We conjecture that a similar
situation holds for three-dimensional incompressible turbulence and suggest
ways of capturing subdominant contributions to scaling.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, submitted to J. Fluid Mech. (fasttrack
Nelkin scaling for the Burgers equation and the role of high-precision calculations
Nelkin scaling, the scaling of moments of velocity gradients in terms of the
Reynolds number, is an alternative way of obtaining inertial-range information.
It is shown numerically and theoretically for the Burgers equation that this
procedure works already for Reynolds numbers of the order of 100 (or even lower
when combined with a suitable extended self-similarity technique). At moderate
Reynolds numbers, for the accurate determination of scaling exponents, it is
crucial to use higher than double precision. Similar issues are likely to arise
for three-dimensional Navier--Stokes simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Published in Phys. Rev E (Rapid Communications
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