scholarly journals Energy cascade with small-scale thermalization, counterflow metastability, and anomalous velocity of vortex rings in Fourier-truncated Gross-Pitaevskii equation

2011 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgio Krstulovic ◽  
Marc Brachet
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamad Ibrahim Cheikh ◽  
James Chen ◽  
Mingjun Wei

1993 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 255-261
Author(s):  
N. Kleeorin ◽  
I. Rogachevskii

The nonlinear (in terms of the large-scale magnetic field) effect of the modification of the magnetic force by an advanced small-scale magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence is considered. The phenomenon is due to the generation of magnetic fluctuations at the expense of hydrodynamic pulsations. It results in a decrease of the elasticity of the large-scale magnetic field.The renormalization group (RNG) method was employed for the investigation of the MHD turbulence at the large magnetic Reynolds number. It was found that the level of the magnetic fluctuations can exceed that obtained from the equipartition assumption due to the inverse energy cascade in advanced MHD turbulence.This effect can excite an instability of the large-scale magnetic field due to the energy transfer from the small-scale turbulent pulsations. This instability is an example of the inverse energy cascade in advanced MHD turbulence. It may act as a mechanism for the large-scale magnetic ropes formation in the solar convective zone and spiral galaxies.


2011 ◽  
Vol 667 ◽  
pp. 463-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDREAS VALLGREN

High-resolution simulations of forced two-dimensional turbulence reveal that the inverse cascade range is sensitive to an infrared Reynolds number, Reα = kf/kα, where kf is the forcing wavenumber and kα is a frictional wavenumber based on linear friction. In the limit of high Reα, the classic k−5/3 scaling is lost and we obtain steeper energy spectra. The sensitivity is traced to the formation of vortices in the inverse energy cascade range. Thus, it is hypothesized that the dual limit Reα → ∞ and Reν = kd/kf → ∞, where kd is the small-scale dissipation wavenumber, will lead to a steeper energy spectrum than k−5/3 in the inverse energy cascade range. It is also found that the inverse energy cascade is maintained by non-local triad interactions.


1994 ◽  
Vol 259 ◽  
pp. 281-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. B. Smith ◽  
T. Wei

Off-axis collisions of equal-strength vortex rings were experimentally examined. Two equal-strength vortices were generated which moved toward each other along parallel, but offset, trajectories. Two colour laser-induced fluorescence visualization techniques were used to observe these phenomena and gain insight into their importance in vortex interactions. The most prominent features of this interaction were rapid growth and rotation of the rings and formation of evenly spaced ringlets around the cores of the original rings. Large-scale motions are described using simple vortex induction arguments. The small scales are caused by nonlinear amplification of instabilities during the asymmetric interaction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 6959-6992
Author(s):  
Weiwei Ao ◽  
Yehui Huang ◽  
Yong Liu ◽  
Juncheng Wei

2021 ◽  
Vol 926 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhiro Inagaki

We investigate the effect of helicity on the scale-similar structures of homogeneous isotropic and non-mirror-symmetric turbulence based on the Lagrangian renormalised approximation (LRA), which is a self-consistent closure theory proposed by Kaneda (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 107, 1981, pp. 131–145). In this study, we focus on the time scale representing the scale-similar range. For the LRA, the Lagrangian two-time velocity correlation and response function determine the representative time scale. The LRA predicts that both the Lagrangian two-time velocity correlation and response function equation do not explicitly depend on helicity. We assume the extended scale-similar spectra and time scale by considering the helicity dissipation rate. Considering the small-scale structures, the requirements for the energy and helicity fluxes and response function equation to be scale similar, yield the conventional inertial-range power laws and provide the energy and helicity spectra $\propto k^{-5/3}$ and the time scale $\propto \varepsilon ^{-1/3} k^{-2/3}$ , where $\varepsilon$ and $k$ denote the energy dissipation rate and wavenumber, respectively. Notably, energy flux can be scale similar only when $k^H /k \ll 1$ , where $k^H = \varepsilon ^H/\varepsilon$ and $\varepsilon ^H$ denotes the helicity dissipation rate. This condition makes the energy cascade process in the scale-similar range completely independent of helicity. We also investigate the localness of the interscale interaction in the energy and helicity cascades for the LRA. We demonstrate that the helicity cascade is slightly non-local in scales compared with the energy cascade. This study provides a foundation on the modelling of non-mirror-symmetric turbulent flows.


2013 ◽  
Vol 720 ◽  
pp. 66-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Deusebio ◽  
A. Vallgren ◽  
E. Lindborg

AbstractWe investigate the route to dissipation in strongly stratified and rotating systems through high-resolution numerical simulations of the Boussinesq equations (BQs) and the primitive equations (PEs) in a triply periodic domain forced at large scales. By applying geostrophic scaling to the BQs and using the same horizontal length scale in defining the Rossby and the Froude numbers, $\mathit{Ro}$ and $\mathit{Fr}$, we show that the PEs can be obtained from the BQs by taking the limit ${\mathit{Fr}}^{2} / {\mathit{Ro}}^{2} \rightarrow 0$. When ${\mathit{Fr}}^{2} / {\mathit{Ro}}^{2} $ is small the difference between the results from the BQ and the PE simulations is shown to be small. For large rotation rates, quasi-geostrophic dynamics are recovered with a forward enstrophy cascade and an inverse energy cascade. As the rotation rate is reduced, a fraction of the energy starts to cascade towards smaller scales, leading to a shallowing of the horizontal spectra from ${ k}_{h}^{- 3} $ to ${ k}_{h}^{- 5/ 3} $ at the small-scale end. The vertical spectra show a similar transition as the horizontal spectra and we find that Charney isotropy is approximately valid also at larger wavenumbers than the transition wavenumber. The high resolutions employed allow us to capture both ranges within the same simulation. At the transition scale, kinetic energy in the rotational and in the horizontally divergent modes attain comparable values. The divergent energy is several orders of magnitude larger than the quasi-geostrophic divergent energy given by the $\Omega $-equation. The amount of energy cascading downscale is mainly controlled by the rotation rate, with a weaker dependence on the stratification. A larger degree of stratification favours a downscale energy cascade. For intermediate degrees of rotation and stratification, a constant energy flux and a constant enstrophy flux coexist within the same range of scales. In this range, the enstrophy flux is a result of triad interactions involving three geostrophic modes, while the energy flux is a result of triad interactions involving at least one ageostrophic mode, with a dominant contribution from interactions involving two ageostrophic and one geostrophic mode. Dividing the ageostrophic motions into two classes depending on the sign of the linear wave frequency, we show that the energy transfer is for the largest part supported by interactions within the same class, ruling out the wave–wave–vortex resonant triad interaction as a mean of the downscale energy transfer. The role of inertia-gravity waves is studied through analyses of time-frequency spectra of single Fourier modes. At large scales, distinct peaks at frequencies predicted for linear waves are observed, whereas at small scales no clear wave activity is observed. Triad interactions show a behaviour which is consistent with turbulent dynamics, with a large exchange of energy in triads with one small and two large comparable wavenumbers. The exchange of energy is mainly between the modes with two comparable wavenumbers.


2017 ◽  
Vol 833 ◽  
pp. 648-676 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. H. New ◽  
B. Zang

Vortical structures and behaviour associated with vortex-ring collisions upon round cylinders with different cylinder-to-vortex-ring diameter ratios were studied using laser-induced fluorescence and time-resolved particle-image velocimetry techniques. Circular vortex rings of Reynolds number 4000 and three diameter ratios of $D/d=1$, 2 and 4 were considered in the present investigation. Results reveal that the collision behaviour is very different from that associated with flat surfaces, in which vortex disconnection and reconnection processes caused by the strong interactions between primary and secondary vortex rings produce small-scale vortex ringlets that eject away from the cylinders. For the cylinder with the largest diameter ratio used here, these vortex ringlets move towards each other along the collision axis, where they eventually collide to produce a vortex dipole that propagates upstream. However, as the diameter ratio decreases, these vortex ringlets are produced further away from the collision axis, which results in them ejecting away from the cylinder at increasingly larger angles relative to the collision axis. Trajectories of key vortex cores were extracted from the experimental results to demonstrate quantitatively the strong sensitivity of these vortical motions upon the diameter ratio. Furthermore, significant differences in the primary vortex-ring circulation along convex surfaces and straight edges after the collisions are observed. In particular, vortex flow models are presented here to better illustrate the highly three-dimensional flow dynamics of the collision behaviour, as well as highlighting the strong dependency of the secondary vortex-ring formation, vortex disconnection/reconnection processes, and ejection of the resulting vortex ringlets upon the diameter ratio. As such, these results are expected to shed more light on the more general scenario of vortex-ring collisions upon arbitrarily contoured solid boundaries.


2018 ◽  
Vol 850 ◽  
pp. 844-874
Author(s):  
B. H. Burgess ◽  
R. K. Scott

We study how the properties of forcing and dissipation affect the scaling behaviour of the vortex population in the two-dimensional turbulent inverse energy cascade. When the flow is forced at scales intermediate between the domain and dissipation scales, the growth rates of the largest vortex area and the spectral peak length scale are robust to all simulation parameters. For white-in-time forcing the number density distribution of vortex areas follows the scaling theory predictions of Burgess & Scott (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 811, 2017, pp. 742–756) and shows little sensitivity either to the forcing bandwidth or to the nature of the small-scale dissipation: both narrowband and broadband forcing generate nearly identical vortex populations, as do Laplacian diffusion and hyperdiffusion. The greatest differences arise in comparing simulations with correlated forcing to those with white-in-time forcing: in flows with correlated forcing the intermediate range in the vortex number density steepens significantly past the predicted scale-invariant $A^{-1}$ scaling. We also study the impact of the forcing Reynolds number $Re_{f}$, a measure of the relative importance of nonlinear terms and dissipation at the forcing scale, on vortex formation and the scaling of the number density. As $Re_{f}$ decreases, the flow changes from one dominated by intense circular vortices surrounded by filaments to a less structured flow in which vortex formation becomes progressively more suppressed and the filamentary nature of the surrounding vorticity field is lost. However, even at very small $Re_{f}$, and in the absence of intense coherent vortex formation, regions of anomalously high vorticity merge and grow in area as predicted by the scaling theory, generating a three-part number density similar to that found at higher $Re_{f}$. At late enough stages the aggregation process results in the formation of long-lived circular vortices, demonstrating a strong tendency to vortex formation, and via a route distinct from the axisymmetrization of forcing extrema seen at higher $Re_{f}$. Our results establish coherent vortices as a robust feature of the two-dimensional inverse energy cascade, and provide clues as to the dynamical mechanisms shaping their statistics.


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