Recent numerical simulations showed that the mean flow is generated in
inhomogeneous turbulence of an incompressible fluid accompanied with helicity
and system rotation. In order to investigate the mechanism of this phenomenon,
we carry out a numerical simulation of inhomogeneous turbulence in a rotating
system. In the simulation, an external force is applied to inject inhomogeneous
turbulent helicity and the rotation axis is taken to be perpendicular to the
inhomogeneous direction. No mean velocity is set in the initial condition of
the simulation. The simulation results show that only in the case with both the
helical forcing and the system rotation, the mean flow directed to the rotation
axis is generated and sustained. We investigate the physical origin of this
flow-generation phenomenon by considering the budget of the Reynolds-stress
transport equation. It is found that the pressure diffusion term has a large
contribution in the Reynolds stress equation and supports the generated mean
flow. It is shown that a model expression for the pressure diffusion can be
expressed by the turbulent helicity gradient coupled with the angular velocity
of the system rotation. This implies that inhomogeneous helicity can play a
significant role for the generation of the large-scale velocity distribution in
incompressible turbulent flows.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure