Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence

Turbulent mixing in geophysics is often affected by the presence of rotation, which renders the flow anisotropic at large scales. Helicity (correlation between the velocity and its curl) has relevance for atmospheric and astrophysical flows and can also affect mixing. In this paper, decaying three-d...

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Autores principales: Teitelbaum, T., Mininni, P.D.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02811847_vT142_n_p_Teitelbaum
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spelling todo:paper_02811847_vT142_n_p_Teitelbaum2023-10-03T15:17:13Z Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence Teitelbaum, T. Mininni, P.D. Anisotropic spectra Astrophysical flows Conserved quantity Energy decay rates Energy spectra Helical turbulence Helicities Initial conditions Isotropic fluids Large-scale effects Rossby numbers Rotating flow Rotating fluids Rotation axis Slow mode Three-dimensional (3D) Time evolutions Turbulent mixing Two-dimensional (2D) turbulence Anisotropy Mixing Reynolds number Rotation Rotational flow Spectroscopy Three dimensional Turbulence Turbulent flow Decay (organic) Turbulent mixing in geophysics is often affected by the presence of rotation, which renders the flow anisotropic at large scales. Helicity (correlation between the velocity and its curl) has relevance for atmospheric and astrophysical flows and can also affect mixing. In this paper, decaying three-dimensional (3D) turbulence is studied via direct numerical simulations (DNS) for an isotropic non-rotating flow and for rotating flows with and without helicity. We analyze the cases of moderate Rossby number and large Reynolds number, focusing on the behavior of the energy spectrum at large scales and studying its effect on the time evolution of the energy and integral scales for E(k)∼k4 initial conditions. In the non-rotating case, we observe the classical energy decay rate t-10/7 and a growth of the integral length proportional to t2/7 in agreement with the prediction obtained assuming conservation of the Loitsyanski integral. In the presence of rotation we observe a decoupling in the decay of the modes perpendicular to the rotation axis from the remaining 3D modes. These slow modes show a behavior similar to that found in two-dimensional (2D) turbulence, whereas the 3D modes decay as in the isotropic case. We phenomenologically explain the decay considering integral conserved quantities that depend on the large-scale anisotropic spectrum. The decoupling of modes is also observed for a flow with a net amount of helicity. In this case, the 3D modes decay as an isotropic fluid with a constant, constrained integral length and the 2D modes decay as a constrained rotating fluid with maximum helicity. © 2010 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Fil:Teitelbaum, T. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Mininni, P.D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. CONF info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02811847_vT142_n_p_Teitelbaum
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Anisotropic spectra
Astrophysical flows
Conserved quantity
Energy decay rates
Energy spectra
Helical turbulence
Helicities
Initial conditions
Isotropic fluids
Large-scale effects
Rossby numbers
Rotating flow
Rotating fluids
Rotation axis
Slow mode
Three-dimensional (3D)
Time evolutions
Turbulent mixing
Two-dimensional (2D) turbulence
Anisotropy
Mixing
Reynolds number
Rotation
Rotational flow
Spectroscopy
Three dimensional
Turbulence
Turbulent flow
Decay (organic)
spellingShingle Anisotropic spectra
Astrophysical flows
Conserved quantity
Energy decay rates
Energy spectra
Helical turbulence
Helicities
Initial conditions
Isotropic fluids
Large-scale effects
Rossby numbers
Rotating flow
Rotating fluids
Rotation axis
Slow mode
Three-dimensional (3D)
Time evolutions
Turbulent mixing
Two-dimensional (2D) turbulence
Anisotropy
Mixing
Reynolds number
Rotation
Rotational flow
Spectroscopy
Three dimensional
Turbulence
Turbulent flow
Decay (organic)
Teitelbaum, T.
Mininni, P.D.
Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
topic_facet Anisotropic spectra
Astrophysical flows
Conserved quantity
Energy decay rates
Energy spectra
Helical turbulence
Helicities
Initial conditions
Isotropic fluids
Large-scale effects
Rossby numbers
Rotating flow
Rotating fluids
Rotation axis
Slow mode
Three-dimensional (3D)
Time evolutions
Turbulent mixing
Two-dimensional (2D) turbulence
Anisotropy
Mixing
Reynolds number
Rotation
Rotational flow
Spectroscopy
Three dimensional
Turbulence
Turbulent flow
Decay (organic)
description Turbulent mixing in geophysics is often affected by the presence of rotation, which renders the flow anisotropic at large scales. Helicity (correlation between the velocity and its curl) has relevance for atmospheric and astrophysical flows and can also affect mixing. In this paper, decaying three-dimensional (3D) turbulence is studied via direct numerical simulations (DNS) for an isotropic non-rotating flow and for rotating flows with and without helicity. We analyze the cases of moderate Rossby number and large Reynolds number, focusing on the behavior of the energy spectrum at large scales and studying its effect on the time evolution of the energy and integral scales for E(k)∼k4 initial conditions. In the non-rotating case, we observe the classical energy decay rate t-10/7 and a growth of the integral length proportional to t2/7 in agreement with the prediction obtained assuming conservation of the Loitsyanski integral. In the presence of rotation we observe a decoupling in the decay of the modes perpendicular to the rotation axis from the remaining 3D modes. These slow modes show a behavior similar to that found in two-dimensional (2D) turbulence, whereas the 3D modes decay as in the isotropic case. We phenomenologically explain the decay considering integral conserved quantities that depend on the large-scale anisotropic spectrum. The decoupling of modes is also observed for a flow with a net amount of helicity. In this case, the 3D modes decay as an isotropic fluid with a constant, constrained integral length and the 2D modes decay as a constrained rotating fluid with maximum helicity. © 2010 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
format CONF
author Teitelbaum, T.
Mininni, P.D.
author_facet Teitelbaum, T.
Mininni, P.D.
author_sort Teitelbaum, T.
title Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
title_short Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
title_full Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
title_fullStr Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
title_full_unstemmed Large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
title_sort large-scale effects on the decay of rotating helical and non-helical turbulence
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02811847_vT142_n_p_Teitelbaum
work_keys_str_mv AT teitelbaumt largescaleeffectsonthedecayofrotatinghelicalandnonhelicalturbulence
AT mininnipd largescaleeffectsonthedecayofrotatinghelicalandnonhelicalturbulence
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