21 research outputs found
Effective diffusivity of passive scalars in rotating turbulence
We use direct numerical simulations to compute turbulent transport
coefficients for passive scalars in turbulent rotating flows. Effective
diffusion coefficients in the directions parallel and perpendicular to the
rotations axis are obtained by studying the diffusion of an imposed initial
profile for the passive scalar, and calculated by measuring the scalar average
concentration and average spatial flux as a function of time. The Rossby and
Schmidt numbers are varied to quantify their effect on the effective diffusion.
It is find that rotation reduces scalar diffusivity in the perpendicular
direction. The perpendicular diffusion can be estimated from mixing length
arguments using the characteristic velocities and lengths perpendicular to the
rotation axis. Deviations are observed for small Schmidt numbers, for which
turbulent transport decreases and molecular diffusion becomes more significant.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures. Slightly modified version to address referees'
comment
Intermittency in Hall-magnetohydrodynamics with a strong guide field
We present a detailed study of intermittency in the velocity and magnetic
field fluctuations of compressible Hall-magnetohydrodynamic turbulence with an
external guide field. To solve the equations numerically, a reduced model valid
when a strong guide field is present is used. Different values for the ion skin
depth are considered in the simulations. The resulting data is analyzed
computing field increments in several directions perpendicular to the guide
field, and building structure functions and probability density functions. In
the magnetohydrodynamic limit we recover the usual results with the magnetic
field being more intermittent than the velocity field. In the presence of the
Hall effect, field fluctuations at scales smaller than the ion skin depth show
a substantial decrease in the level of intermittency, with close to monofractal
scaling.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Anomalous scaling of passive scalars in rotating flows
We present results of direct numerical simulations of passive scalar
advection and diffusion in turbulent rotating flows. Scaling laws and the
development of anisotropy are studied in spectral space, and in real space
using an axisymmetric decomposition of velocity and passive scalar structure
functions. The passive scalar is more anisotropic than the velocity field, and
its power spectrum follows a spectral law consistent with . This scaling is explained with phenomenological arguments that
consider the effect of rotation. Intermittency is characterized using scaling
exponents and probability density functions of velocity and passive scalar
increments. In the presence of rotation, intermittency in the velocity field
decreases more noticeably than in the passive scalar. The scaling exponents
show good agreement with Kraichnan's prediction for passive scalar
intermittency in two-dimensions, after correcting for the observed scaling of
the second order exponent.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figure