142 research outputs found

    ANOMALOUS SCALING OF THE PASSIVE SCALAR

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    We establish anomalous inertial range scaling of structure functions for a model of advection of a passive scalar by a random velocity field. The velocity statistics is taken gaussian with decorrelation in time and velocity differences scaling as xκ/2|x|^{\kappa/2} in space, with 0κ<20\leq\kappa < 2. The scalar is driven by a gaussian forcing acting on spatial scale LL and decorrelated in time. The structure functions for the scalar are well defined as the diffusivity is taken to zero and acquire anomalous scaling behavior for large pumping scales LL. The anomalous exponent is calculated explicitly for the 4^{\m\rm th} structure function and for small κ\kappa and it differs from previous predictions. For all but the second structure functions the anomalous exponents are nonvanishing.Comment: 8 pages, late

    Closure of two dimensional turbulence: the role of pressure gradients

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    Inverse energy cascade regime of two dimensional turbulence is investigated by means of high resolution numerical simulations. Numerical computations of conditional averages of transverse pressure gradient increments are found to be compatible with a recently proposed self-consistent Gaussian model. An analogous low order closure model for the longitudinal pressure gradient is proposed and its validity is numerically examined. In this case numerical evidence for the presence of higher order terms in the closure is found. The fundamental role of conditional statistics between longitudinal and transverse components is highlighted.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, in press on PR

    Universal long-time properties of Lagrangian statistics in the Batchelor regime and their application to the passive scalar problem

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    We consider transport of dynamically passive quantities in the Batchelor regime of smooth in space velocity field. For the case of arbitrary temporal correlations of the velocity we formulate the statistics of relevant characteristics of Lagrangian motion. This allows to generalize many results obtained previously for the delta-correlated in time strain, thus answering the question of universality of these results.Comment: 11 pages, revtex; added references, typos correcte

    Anomalous exponents in the rapid-change model of the passive scalar advection in the order ϵ3\epsilon^{3}

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    Field theoretic renormalization group is applied to the Kraichnan model of a passive scalar advected by the Gaussian velocity field with the covariance <v(t,x)v(t,x)>δ(tt)xxϵ - <{\bf v}(t,{\bf x}){\bf v}(t',{\bf x'})> \propto\delta(t-t')|{\bf x}-{\bf x'} |^{\epsilon}. Inertial-range anomalous exponents, related to the scaling dimensions of tensor composite operators built of the scalar gradients, are calculated to the order ϵ3\epsilon^{3} of the ϵ\epsilon expansion. The nature and the convergence of the ϵ\epsilon expansion in the models of turbulence is are briefly discussed.Comment: 4 pages; REVTeX source with 3 postscript figure

    Calculation of the anomalous exponents in the rapid-change model of passive scalar advection to order ε3\varepsilon^{3}

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    The field theoretic renormalization group and operator product expansion are applied to the model of a passive scalar advected by the Gaussian velocity field with zero mean and correlation function \propto\delta(t-t')/k^{d+\eps}. Inertial-range anomalous exponents, identified with the critical dimensions of various scalar and tensor composite operators constructed of the scalar gradients, are calculated within the ε\varepsilon expansion to order ε3\varepsilon^{3} (three-loop approximation), including the exponents in anisotropic sectors. The main goal of the paper is to give the complete derivation of this third-order result, and to present and explain in detail the corresponding calculational techniques. The character and convergence properties of the ε\varepsilon expansion are discussed; the improved ``inverse'' ε\varepsilon expansion is proposed and the comparison with the existing nonperturbative results is given.Comment: 34 pages, 5 figures, REVTe

    Passive scalar turbulence in high dimensions

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    Exploiting a Lagrangian strategy we present a numerical study for both perturbative and nonperturbative regions of the Kraichnan advection model. The major result is the numerical assessment of the first-order 1/d1/d-expansion by M. Chertkov, G. Falkovich, I. Kolokolov and V. Lebedev ({\it Phys. Rev. E}, {\bf 52}, 4924 (1995)) for the fourth-order scalar structure function in the limit of high dimensions dd's. %Two values of the velocity scaling exponent ξ\xi have been considered: %ξ=0.8\xi=0.8 and ξ=0.6\xi=0.6. In the first case, the perturbative regime %takes place at d30d\sim 30, while in the second at d25d\sim 25, %in agreement with the fact that the relevant small parameter %of the theory is 1/(d(2ξ))\propto 1/(d (2-\xi)). In addition to the perturbative results, the behavior of the anomaly for the sixth-order structure functions {\it vs} the velocity scaling exponent, ξ\xi, is investigated and the resulting behavior discussed.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 4 figure

    Anomalous scaling of a passive scalar in the presence of strong anisotropy

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    Field theoretic renormalization group and the operator product expansion are applied to a model of a passive scalar field, advected by the Gaussian strongly anisotropic velocity field. Inertial-range anomalous scaling behavior is established, and explicit asymptotic expressions for the n-th order structure functions of scalar field are obtained; they are represented by superpositions of power laws with nonuniversal (dependent on the anisotropy parameters) anomalous exponents. In the limit of vanishing anisotropy, the exponents are associated with tensor composite operators built of the scalar gradients, and exhibit a kind of hierarchy related to the degree of anisotropy: the less is the rank, the less is the dimension and, consequently, the more important is the contribution to the inertial-range behavior. The leading terms of the even (odd) structure functions are given by the scalar (vector) operators. For the finite anisotropy, the exponents cannot be associated with individual operators (which are essentially ``mixed'' in renormalization), but the aforementioned hierarchy survives for all the cases studied. The second-order structure function is studied in more detail using the renormalization group and zero-mode techniques.Comment: REVTEX file with EPS figure

    Passive Sliders on Growing Surfaces and (anti-)Advection in Burger's Flows

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    We study the fluctuations of particles sliding on a stochastically growing surface. This problem can be mapped to motion of passive scalars in a randomly stirred Burger's flow. Renormalization group studies, simulations, and scaling arguments in one dimension, suggest a rich set of phenomena: If particles slide with the avalanche of growth sites (advection with the fluid), they tend to cluster and follow the surface dynamics. However, for particles sliding against the avalanche (anti-advection), we find slower diffusion dynamics, and density fluctuations with no simple relation to the underlying fluid, possibly with continuously varying exponents.Comment: 4 pages revtex

    Dynamics of a passive sliding particle on a randomly fluctuating surface

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    We study the motion of a particle sliding under the action of an external field on a stochastically fluctuating one-dimensional Edwards-Wilkinson surface. Numerical simulations using the single-step model shows that the mean-square displacement of the sliding particle shows distinct dynamic scaling behavior, depending on whether the surface fluctuates faster or slower than the motion of the particle. When the surface fluctuations occur on a time scale much smaller than the particle motion, we find that the characteristic length scale shows anomalous diffusion with ξ(t)t2ϕ\xi(t)\sim t^{2\phi}, where ϕ0.67\phi\approx 0.67 from numerical data. On the other hand, when the particle moves faster than the surface, its dynamics is controlled by the surface fluctuations and ξ(t)t1/2\xi(t)\sim t^{{1/2}}. A self-consistent approximation predicts that the anomalous diffusion exponent is ϕ=2/3\phi={2/3}, in good agreement with simulation results. We also discuss the possibility of a slow cross-over towards asymptotic diffusive behavior. The probability distribution of the displacement has a Gaussian form in both the cases.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, error in reference corrected and new reference added, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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