The physical nature of compressible turbulence is of fundamental importance
in a variety of astrophysical settings. We present the first direct evidence
that mean kinetic energy cascades conservatively beyond a transitional
"conversion" scale-range despite not being an invariant of the compressible
flow dynamics. We use high-resolution three-dimensional simulations of
compressible hydrodynamic turbulence on 5123 and 10243 grids. We probe
regimes of forced steady-state isothermal flows and of unforced decaying ideal
gas flows. The key quantity we measure is pressure dilatation cospectrum,
EPD(k), where we provide the first numerical evidence that it decays at a
rate faster than k−1 as a function of wavenumber. This is sufficient to
imply that mean pressure dilatation acts primarily at large-scales and that
kinetic and internal energy budgets statistically decouple beyond a
transitional scale-range. Our results suggest that an extension of Kolmogorov's
inertial-range theory to compressible turbulence is possible.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure