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Three-dimensional shear-flow instability saturation via stable modes

Author
Abstract

Turbulence in three dimensions (3D) supports vortex stretching that has long been known to accomplish energy transfer to small scales. Moreover, net energy transfer from large-scale, forced, unstable flow-gradients to smaller scales is achieved by gradient-flattening instability. Despite such enforcement of energy transfer to small scales, it is shown here not only that the shear-flow-instability-supplied 3D-fluctuation energy is largely inverse-transferred from the fluctuation to the mean-flow gradient, but that such inverse transfer is more efficient for turbulent fluctuations in 3D than in two dimensions (2D). The transfer is due to linearly stable eigenmodes that are excited nonlinearly. The stable modes, thus, reduce both the nonlinear energy cascade to small scales and the viscous dissipation rate. The vortex-tube stretching is also suppressed. Up-gradient momentum transport by the stable modes counters the instability-driven down-gradient transport, which also is more effective in 3D than in 2D (≈70% vs. ≈50%). From unstable modes, these stable modes nonlinearly receive energy via zero-frequency fluctuations that vary only in the direction orthogonal to the plane of 2D shear flow. The more widely occurring 3D turbulence is thus inherently different from the commonly studied 2D turbulence, despite both saturating via stable modes.

Year of Publication
2023
Journal
Physics of Fluids
Volume
35
Issue
10
Number of Pages
105151
URL
https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.09339
DOI
10.1063/5.0167092
PId
65cfd5027255b6bb1a01c2e8b4c67832
Alternate Journal
Phys. Fluids
Label
OA
Journal Article
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