Finite-amplitude equilibrium states in plane Couette flow

Abstract

A numerical bifurcation study in plane Couette flow is performed by computing successive finite-amplitude equilibrium states, solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations. Plane Couette flow being linearly stable for all Reynolds numbers, first twodimensional equilibrium states are computed by extending nonlinear travelling waves in plane Poiseuille flow through the Poiseuille-Couette flow family to the plane Couette flow limit. The resulting nonlinear states are stationary with a spatially localized structure ; they are subject to two-dimensional and three-dimensional secondary disturbances. Three-dimensional disturbances dominate the dynamics and three-dimensional stationary equilibrium states bifurcating at criticality on the twodimensional equilibrium surface are computed. These nonlinear states, periodic in the spanwise direction and spatially localized in the streamwise direction, are computed for Reynolds numbers (based on half the velocity difference between the walls and channel half-width) close to 1000. While a possible relationship between the computed solutions and experimentally observed coherent structures in turbulent plane Couette flow has to be assessed, the present findings reinforce the idea that subcritical transition may be related to the existence of finite-amplitude states which are (unstable) fixed points in a dynamical systems formulation of the Navier-Stokes system

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