127 research outputs found
On turbulent spots in plane Poiseuille flow
Turbulence characteristics inside a turbulent spot in plume Poiseuille flow are investigated by analyzing a data base obtained from a direct numerical simulation. The spot is found to consist of two distinct regions - a turbulent area and a wave area. The flow inside the turbulent area has a strong resemblance to that found in the fully developed turbulent channel. Suitably defined mean and rms fluctuations as well as the internal shear layer structures are found to be similar to the turbulent counterpart. In the wave area, the inflexional mean spanwise profiles cause a rapid growth of oblique waves, which break down to turbulence. The breakdown process of the oblique waves is reminiscent of the secondary instability observed during transition to turbulence in channel and boundary layer flows. Other detailed characteristics associated with the Poiseuille spot are presented and are compared with experimental results
A model for the collapse of the edge when two transitions routes compete
The transition to turbulence in many shear flows proceeds along two competing
routes, one linked with finite-amplitude disturbances and the other one
originating from a linear instability, as in e.g. boundary layer flows. The
dynamical systems concept of edge manifold has been suggested in the
subcritical case to explain the partition of the state space of the system.
This investigation is devoted to the evolution of the edge manifold when a
linear stability is added in such subcritical systems, a situation poorly
studied despite its prevalence in realistic fluid flows. In particular the fate
of the edge state as a mediator of transition is unclear. A deterministic
three-dimensional model is suggested, parametrised by the linear instability
growth rate. The edge manifold evolves topologically, via a global saddle-loop
bifurcation, from the separatrix between two attraction basins to the mediator
between two transition routes. For larger instability rates, the stable
manifold of the saddle point increases in codimension from 1 to 2 after an
additional local saddle node bifurcation, causing the collapse of the edge
manifold. As the growth rate is increased, three different regimes of this
model are identified, each one associated with a flow case from the recent
hydrodynamic literature. A simple nonautonomous generalisation of the model is
also suggested in order to capture the complexity of spatially developing
flows.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, under review in Phys. Rev.
Secondary threshold amplitudes for sinuous streak breakdown
The nonlinear stability of laminar sinuously bent streaks is studied for the plane Couette flow at Re=500 in a nearly minimal box and for the Blasius boundary layer at Re_d*= 700. The initial perturbations are nonlinearly saturated streamwise streaks of amplitude AU perturbed with sinuous
perturbations of amplitude AW. The local boundary of the basin of attraction of the linearly stable laminar flow is computed by bisection and projected in the AU – AW plane providing a well defined critical curve. Different streak transition scenarios are seen to correspond to different regions of the critical curve. The modal instability of the streaks is responsible for transition for AU ~ 25%–27%
for the considered flows, where sinuous perturbations of amplitude below AW ~ 1%–2% are sufficient to counteract the streak viscous dissipation and induce breakdown. The critical amplitude of the sinuous perturbations increases when the streamwise streak amplitude is decreased. With
secondary perturbations amplitude AW ~ 4%, breakdown is induced on stable streamwise streaks with AU ~ 13%, following the secondary transient growth scenario first examined by Schoppa and Hussain [J. Fluid Mech. 453, 57 (2002)]. A cross-over, where the critical amplitude of the sinuous perturbation becomes larger than the amplitude of streamwise streaks, is observed for streaks of small amplitude AU < 5%–6%. In this case, the transition is induced by an initial transient amplification of streamwise vortices, forced by the decaying sinuous mode. This is followed by the growth of the streaks and final breakdown. The shape of the critical AU – AW curve is very similar
for Couette and boundary layer flows and seems to be relatively insensitive to the nature of the edge states on the basin boundary. The shape of this critical curve indicates that the stability of streamwise streaks should always be assessed in terms of both the streak amplitude and the amplitude of spanwise velocity perturbations
On the relevance of Reynolds stresses in resolvent analyses of turbulent wall-bounded flows
The ability of linear stochastic response analysis to estimate coherent
motions is investigated in turbulent channel flow at friction Reynolds number
Re = 1007. The analysis is performed for spatial scales characteristic
of buffer-layer and large-scale motions by separating the contributions of
different temporal frequencies. Good agreement between the measured
spatio-temporal power spectral densities and those estimated by means of the
resolvent is found when the effect of turbulent Reynolds stresses, modelled
with an eddy-viscosity associated to the turbulent mean flow, is included in
the resolvent operator. The agreement is further improved when the flat forcing
power spectrum (white noise) is replaced with a power spectrum matching the
measures. Such a good agreement is not observed when the eddy-viscosity terms
are not included in the resolvent operator. In this case, the estimation based
on the resolvent is unable to select the right peak frequency and wall-normal
location of buffer-layer motions. Similar results are found when comparing
truncated expansions of measured streamwise velocity power spectral densities
based on a spectral proper orthogonal decomposition to those obtained with
optimal resolvent modes
Stability of a jet in crossflow
We have produced a fluid dynamics video with data from Direct Numerical
Simulation (DNS) of a jet in crossflow at several low values of the velocity
inflow ratio R. We show that, as the velocity ratio R increases, the flow
evolves from simple periodic vortex shedding (a limit cycle) to more
complicated quasi-periodic behavior, before finally exhibiting asymmetric
chaotic motion. We also perform a stability analysis just above the first
bifurcation, where R is the bifurcation parameter. Using the overlap of the
direct and the adjoint eigenmodes, we confirm that the first instability arises
in the shear layer downstream of the jet orifice on the boundary of the
backflow region just behind the jet.Comment: Two fluid dynamics videos, high-resolution 1024x768 (~80MB), and low
resolution 320x240 (~10MB), included in the ancillary file
Recurrent bursts via linear processes in turbulent environments
Large-scale instabilities occurring in the presence of small-scale turbulent
fluctuations are frequently observed in geophysical or astrophysical contexts
but are difficult to reproduce in the laboratory. Using extensive numerical
simulations, we report here on intense recurrent bursts of turbulence in plane
Poiseuille flow rotating about a spanwise axis. A simple model based on the
linear instability of the mean flow can predict the structure and time scale of
the nearly-periodic and self-sustained burst cycles. Rotating Poiseuille flow
is suggested as a prototype for future studies of low-dimensional dynamics
embedded in strongly turbulent environments
Bypass transition and spot nucleation in boundary layers
The spatio-temporal aspects of the transition to turbulence are considered in
the case of a boundary layer flow developing above a flat plate exposed to
free-stream turbulence. Combining results on the receptivity to free-stream
turbulence with the nonlinear concept of a transition threshold, a physically
motivated model suggests a spatial distribution of spot nucleation events. To
describe the evolution of turbulent spots a probabilistic cellular automaton is
introduced, with all parameters directly fitted from numerical simulations of
the boundary layer. The nucleation rates are then combined with the cellular
automaton model, yielding excellent quantitative agreement with the statistical
characteristics for different free-stream turbulence levels. We thus show how
the recent theoretical progress on transitional wall-bounded flows can be
extended to the much wider class of spatially developing boundary-layer flows
- …