420 research outputs found

    Towards a Nonperturbative Theory of Hydrodynamic Turbulence:Fusion Rules, Exact Bridge Relations and Anomalous Viscous Scaling Functions

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    In this paper we derive here, on the basis of the NS eqs. a set of fusion rules for correlations of velocity differences when all the separation are in the inertial interval. Using this we consider the standard hierarchy of equations relating the nn-th order correlations (originating from the viscous term in the NS eq.) to n+1n+1'th order (originating from the nonlinear term) and demonstrate that for fully unfused correlations the viscous term is negligible. Consequently the hierarchic chain is decoupled in the sense that the correlations of n+1n+1'th order satisfy a homogeneous equation that may exhibit anomalous scaling solutions. Using the same hierarchy of eqs. when some separations go to zero we derive a second set of fusion rules for correlations with differences in the viscous range. The latter includes gradient fields. We demonstrate that every n'th order correlation function of velocity differences {\cal F}_n(\B.R_1,\B.R_2,\dots) exhibits its own cross-over length ηn\eta_{n} to dissipative behavior as a function of, say, R1R_1. This length depends on nn {and on the remaining separations} R2,R3,R_2,R_3,\dots. When all these separations are of the same order RR this length scales like ηn(R)η(R/L)xn\eta_n(R)\sim \eta (R/L)^{x_n} with xn=(ζnζn+1+ζ3ζ2)/(2ζ2)x_n=(\zeta_n-\zeta_{n+1}+\zeta_3-\zeta_2)/(2-\zeta_2), with ζn\zeta_n being the scaling exponent of the nn'th order structure function. We derive a class of exact scaling relations bridging the exponents of correlations of gradient fields to the exponents ζn\zeta_n of the nn'th order structure functions. One of these relations is the well known ``bridge relation" for the scaling exponent of dissipation fluctuations μ=2ζ6\mu=2-\zeta_6.Comment: PRE, Submitted. REVTeX, 18 pages, 7 figures (not included) PS Source of the paper with figures avalable at http://lvov.weizmann.ac.il/onlinelist.htm

    The Viscous Lengths in Hydrodynamic Turbulence are Anomalous Scaling Functions

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    It is shown that the idea that scaling behavior in turbulence is limited by one outer length LL and one inner length η\eta is untenable. Every n'th order correlation function of velocity differences \bbox{\cal F}_n(\B.R_1,\B.R_2,\dots) exhibits its own cross-over length ηn\eta_{n} to dissipative behavior as a function of, say, R1R_1. This length depends on nn {and on the remaining separations} R2,R3,R_2,R_3,\dots. One result of this Letter is that when all these separations are of the same order RR this length scales like ηn(R)η(R/L)xn\eta_n(R)\sim \eta (R/L)^{x_n} with xn=(ζnζn+1+ζ3ζ2)/(2ζ2)x_n=(\zeta_n-\zeta_{n+1}+\zeta_3-\zeta_2)/(2-\zeta_2), with ζn\zeta_n being the scaling exponent of the nn'th order structure function. We derive a class of scaling relations including the ``bridge relation" for the scaling exponent of dissipation fluctuations μ=2ζ6\mu=2-\zeta_6.Comment: PRL, Submitted. REVTeX, 4 pages, I fig. (not included) PS Source of the paper with figure avalable at http://lvov.weizmann.ac.il/onlinelist.htm

    Exact Resummations in the Theory of Hydrodynamic Turbulence: II A Ladder to Anomalous Scaling

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    In paper I of this series on fluid turbulence we showed that exact resummations of the perturbative theory of the structure functions of velocity differences result in a finite (order by order) theory. These findings exclude any known perturbative mechanism for anomalous scaling of the velocity structure functions. In this paper we continue to build the theory of turbulence and commence the analysis of nonperturbative effects that form the analytic basis of anomalous scaling. Starting from the Navier-Stokes equations (at high Reynolds number Re) we discuss the simplest examples of the appearance of anomalous exponents in fluid mechanics. These examples are the nonlinear (four-point) Green's function and related quantities. We show that the renormalized perturbation theory for these functions contains ``ladder`` diagrams with (convergent!) logarithmic terms that sum up to anomalous exponents. Using a new sum rule which is derived here we calculate the leading anomalous exponent and show that it is critical in a sense made precise below. This result opens up the possibility of multiscaling of the structure functions with the outer scale of turbulence as the renormalization length. This possibility will be discussed in detail in the concluding paper III of this series.Comment: PRE in press, 15 pages + 21 figures, REVTeX, The Eps files of figures will be FTPed by request to [email protected]

    Exact Resummations in the Theory of Hydrodynamic Turbulence: III. Scenarios for Anomalous Scaling and Intermittency

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    Elements of the analytic structure of anomalous scaling and intermittency in fully developed hydrodynamic turbulence are described. We focus here on the structure functions of velocity differences that satisfy inertial range scaling laws Sn(R)RζnS_n(R)\sim R^{\zeta_n}, and the correlation of energy dissipation Kϵϵ(R)RμK_{\epsilon\epsilon}(R) \sim R^{-\mu}. The goal is to understand the exponents ζn\zeta_n and μ\mu from first principles. In paper II of this series it was shown that the existence of an ultraviolet scale (the dissipation scale η\eta) is associated with a spectrum of anomalous exponents that characterize the ultraviolet divergences of correlations of gradient fields. The leading scaling exponent in this family was denoted Δ\Delta. The exact resummation of ladder diagrams resulted in the calculation of Δ\Delta which satisfies the scaling relation Δ=2ζ2\Delta=2-\zeta_2. In this paper we continue our analysis and show that nonperturbative effects may introduce multiscaling (i.e. ζn\zeta_n not being linear in nn) with the renormalization scale being the infrared outer scale of turbulence LL. It is shown that deviations from K41 scaling of Sn(R)S_n(R) (ζnn/3\zeta_n\neq n/3) must appear if the correlation of dissipation is mixing (i.e. μ>0\mu>0). We derive an exact scaling relation μ=2ζ2ζ4\mu = 2\zeta_2-\zeta_4. We present analytic expressions for ζn\zeta_n for all nn and discuss their relation to experimental data. One surprising prediction is that the time decay constant τn(R)Rzn\tau_n(R)\propto R^{z_n} of Sn(R)S_n(R) scales independently of nn: the dynamic scaling exponent znz_n is the same for all nn-order quantities, zn=ζ2z_n=\zeta_2.Comment: PRE submitted, 22 pages + 11 figures, REVTeX. The Eps files of figures will be FTPed by request to [email protected]

    Saturation of Turbulent Drag Reduction in Dilute Polymer Solutions

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    Drag reduction by polymers in turbulent wall-bounded flows exhibits universal and non-universal aspects. The universal maximal mean velocity profile was explained in a recent theory. The saturation of this profile and the crossover back to the Newtonian plug are non-universal, depending on Reynolds number Re, concentration of polymer cpc_p and the degree of polymerization NpN_p. We explain the mechanism of saturation stemming from the finiteness of extensibility of the polymers, predict its dependence on cpc_p and NN in the limit of small cpc_p and large Re, and present the excellent comparison of our predictions to experiments on drag reduction by DNA.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figs., included, PRL, submitte

    Dynamics of the vortex line density in superfluid counterflow turbulence

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    Describing superfluid turbulence at intermediate scales between the inter-vortex distance and the macroscale requires an acceptable equation of motion for the density of quantized vortex lines L\cal{L}. The closure of such an equation for superfluid inhomogeneous flows requires additional inputs besides L\cal{L} and the normal and superfluid velocity fields. In this paper we offer a minimal closure using one additional anisotropy parameter Il0I_{l0}. Using the example of counterflow superfluid turbulence we derive two coupled closure equations for the vortex line density and the anisotropy parameter Il0I_{l0} with an input of the normal and superfluid velocity fields. The various closure assumptions and the predictions of the resulting theory are tested against numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    Fusion Rules in Turbulent Systems with Flux Equilibrium

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    Fusion rules in turbulence specify the analytic structure of many-point correlation functions of the turbulent field when a group of coordinates coalesce. We show that the existence of flux equilibrium in fully developed turbulent systems combined with a direct cascade induces universal fusion rules. In certain examples these fusion rules suffice to compute the multiscaling exponents exactly, and in other examples they give rise to an infinite number of scaling relations that constrain enormously the structure of the allowed theory.Comment: Submitted to PRL on July 95, 4 pages, REVTe
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