Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing

We perform two high-resolution direct numerical simulations of stratified turbulence for Reynolds number equal to Re≈25000 and Froude number, respectively, of Fr≈0.1 and Fr≈0.03. The flows are forced at large scale and discretized on an isotropic grid of 20483 points. Stratification makes the flow a...

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Autores principales: Rorai, C., Mininni, P.D., Pouquet, A.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v92_n1_p_Rorai
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spelling todo:paper_15393755_v92_n1_p_Rorai2023-10-03T16:22:52Z Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing Rorai, C. Mininni, P.D. Pouquet, A. Boundary layers Buoyancy Energy dissipation Fourier series Froude number Reynolds number Spectroscopy Turbulence Atmospheric observations Energy dissipation rate Homogeneous isotropic turbulence Kolmogorov scaling Planetary boundary layers Relative amplitude Stratified turbulence Total-energy spectrum Atmospheric thermodynamics We perform two high-resolution direct numerical simulations of stratified turbulence for Reynolds number equal to Re≈25000 and Froude number, respectively, of Fr≈0.1 and Fr≈0.03. The flows are forced at large scale and discretized on an isotropic grid of 20483 points. Stratification makes the flow anisotropic and introduces two extra characteristic scales with respect to homogeneous isotropic turbulence: the buoyancy scale, LB, and the Ozmidov scale, oz. The former is related to the number of layers that the flow develops in the direction of gravity, and the latter is regarded as the scale at which isotropy is recovered. The values of LB and oz depend on the Froude number, and their absolute and relative amplitudes affect the repartition of energy among Fourier modes in ways that are not easy to predict. By contrasting the behavior of the two simulated flows we identify some surprising similarities: After an initial transient the two flows evolve towards comparable values of the kinetic and potential enstrophy and energy dissipation rate. This is the result of the Reynolds number being large enough in both flows for the Ozmidov scale to be resolved. When properly dimensionalized, the energy dissipation rate is compatible with atmospheric observations. Further similarities emerge at large scales: The same ratio between potential and total energy (≈0.1) is spontaneously selected by the flows, and slow modes grow monotonically in both regimes, causing a slow increase of the total energy in time. The axisymmetric total energy spectrum shows a wide variety of spectral slopes as a function of the angle between the imposed stratification and the wave vector. One-dimensional energy spectra computed in the direction parallel to gravity are flat from the forcing up to buoyancy scale. At intermediate scales a ∼k-3 parallel spectrum develops for the Fr≈0.03 run, whereas for weaker stratification, the saturation spectrum does not have enough scales to develop and instead one observes a power law compatible with Kolmogorov scaling. Finally, the spectrum of helicity is flat until LB, as observed in the nocturnal planetary boundary layer. © 2015 American Physical Society. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v92_n1_p_Rorai
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Boundary layers
Buoyancy
Energy dissipation
Fourier series
Froude number
Reynolds number
Spectroscopy
Turbulence
Atmospheric observations
Energy dissipation rate
Homogeneous isotropic turbulence
Kolmogorov scaling
Planetary boundary layers
Relative amplitude
Stratified turbulence
Total-energy spectrum
Atmospheric thermodynamics
spellingShingle Boundary layers
Buoyancy
Energy dissipation
Fourier series
Froude number
Reynolds number
Spectroscopy
Turbulence
Atmospheric observations
Energy dissipation rate
Homogeneous isotropic turbulence
Kolmogorov scaling
Planetary boundary layers
Relative amplitude
Stratified turbulence
Total-energy spectrum
Atmospheric thermodynamics
Rorai, C.
Mininni, P.D.
Pouquet, A.
Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
topic_facet Boundary layers
Buoyancy
Energy dissipation
Fourier series
Froude number
Reynolds number
Spectroscopy
Turbulence
Atmospheric observations
Energy dissipation rate
Homogeneous isotropic turbulence
Kolmogorov scaling
Planetary boundary layers
Relative amplitude
Stratified turbulence
Total-energy spectrum
Atmospheric thermodynamics
description We perform two high-resolution direct numerical simulations of stratified turbulence for Reynolds number equal to Re≈25000 and Froude number, respectively, of Fr≈0.1 and Fr≈0.03. The flows are forced at large scale and discretized on an isotropic grid of 20483 points. Stratification makes the flow anisotropic and introduces two extra characteristic scales with respect to homogeneous isotropic turbulence: the buoyancy scale, LB, and the Ozmidov scale, oz. The former is related to the number of layers that the flow develops in the direction of gravity, and the latter is regarded as the scale at which isotropy is recovered. The values of LB and oz depend on the Froude number, and their absolute and relative amplitudes affect the repartition of energy among Fourier modes in ways that are not easy to predict. By contrasting the behavior of the two simulated flows we identify some surprising similarities: After an initial transient the two flows evolve towards comparable values of the kinetic and potential enstrophy and energy dissipation rate. This is the result of the Reynolds number being large enough in both flows for the Ozmidov scale to be resolved. When properly dimensionalized, the energy dissipation rate is compatible with atmospheric observations. Further similarities emerge at large scales: The same ratio between potential and total energy (≈0.1) is spontaneously selected by the flows, and slow modes grow monotonically in both regimes, causing a slow increase of the total energy in time. The axisymmetric total energy spectrum shows a wide variety of spectral slopes as a function of the angle between the imposed stratification and the wave vector. One-dimensional energy spectra computed in the direction parallel to gravity are flat from the forcing up to buoyancy scale. At intermediate scales a ∼k-3 parallel spectrum develops for the Fr≈0.03 run, whereas for weaker stratification, the saturation spectrum does not have enough scales to develop and instead one observes a power law compatible with Kolmogorov scaling. Finally, the spectrum of helicity is flat until LB, as observed in the nocturnal planetary boundary layer. © 2015 American Physical Society.
format JOUR
author Rorai, C.
Mininni, P.D.
Pouquet, A.
author_facet Rorai, C.
Mininni, P.D.
Pouquet, A.
author_sort Rorai, C.
title Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
title_short Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
title_full Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
title_fullStr Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
title_full_unstemmed Stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
title_sort stably stratified turbulence in the presence of large-scale forcing
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15393755_v92_n1_p_Rorai
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AT pouqueta stablystratifiedturbulenceinthepresenceoflargescaleforcing
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