Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Turbulence as a problem in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics

71   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Nigel Goldenfeld
 Publication date 2016
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The transitional and well-developed regimes of turbulent shear flows exhibit a variety of remarkable scaling laws that are only now beginning to be systematically studied and understood. In the first part of this article, we summarize recent progress in understanding the friction factor of turbulent flows in rough pipes and quasi-two-dimensional soap films, showing how the data obey a two-parameter scaling law known as roughness-induced criticality, and exhibit power-law scaling of friction factor with Reynolds number that depends on the precise form of the nature of the turbulent cascade. These results hint at a non-equilibrium fluctuation-dissipation relation that applies to turbulent flows. The second part of this article concerns the lifetime statistics in smooth pipes around the transition, showing how the remarkable super-exponential scaling with Reynolds number reflects deep connections between large deviation theory, extreme value statistics, directed percolation and the onset of coexistence in predator-prey ecosystems. Both these phenomena reflect the way in which turbulence can be fruitfully approached as a problem in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics.



rate research

Read More

Recently, new thermodynamic inequalities have been obtained, which set bounds on the quadratic fluctuations of intensive observables of statistical mechanical systems in terms of the Bogoliubov - Duhamel inner product and some thermal average values. It was shown that several well-known inequalities in equilibrium statistical mechanics emerge as special cases of these results. On the basis of the spectral representation, lower and upper bounds on the one-sided fidelity susceptibility were derived in analogous terms. Here, these results are reviewed and presented in a unified manner. In addition, the spectral representation of the symmetric two-sided fidelity susceptibility is derived, and it is shown to coincide with the one-sided case. Therefore, both definitions imply the same lower and upper bounds on the fidelity susceptibility.
149 - Anupam Gupta 2014
We obtain, by extensive direct numerical simulations, trajectories of heavy inertial particles in two-dimensional, statistically steady, homogeneous, and isotropic turbulent flows, with friction. We show that the probability distribution function $mathcal{P}(kappa)$, of the trajectory curvature $kappa$, is such that, as $kappa to infty$, $mathcal{P}(kappa) sim kappa^{-h_{rm r}}$, with $h_{rm r} = 2.07 pm 0.09$. The exponent $h_{rm r}$ is universal, insofar as it is independent of the Stokes number ($rm{St}$) and the energy-injection wave number. We show that this exponent lies within error bars of their counterparts for trajectories of Lagrangian tracers. We demonstrate that the complexity of heavy-particle trajectories can be characterized by the number $N_{rm I}(t,{rm St})$ of inflection points (up until time $t$) in the trajectory and $n_{rm I} ({rm St}) equiv lim_{ttoinfty} frac{N_{rm I} (t,{rm St})}{t} sim {rm St}^{-Delta}$, where the exponent $Delta = 0.33 pm0.02$ is also universal.
We investigate non-equilibrium turbulence where the non-dimensionalised dissipation coefficient $C_{varepsilon}$ scales as $C_{varepsilon} sim Re_{M}^{m}/Re_{ell}^{n}$ with $mapprox 1 approx n$ ($Re_M$ and $Re_{ell}$ are global/inlet and local Reynolds numbers respectively) by measuring the downstream evolution of the scale-by-scale energy transfer, dissipation, advection, production and transport in the lee of a square-mesh grid and compare with a region of equilibrium turbulence (i.e. where $C_{varepsilon}approx mathrm{constant}$). These are the main terms of the inhomogeneous, anisotropic version of the von K{a}rm{a}n-Howarth-Monin equation. It is shown in the grid-generated turbulence studied here that, even in the presence of non-negligible turbulence production and transport, production and transport are large-scale phenomena that do not contribute to the scale-by-scale balance for scales smaller than about a third of the integral-length scale, $ell$, and therefore do not affect the energy transfer to the small-scales. In both the non-equilibrium and the equilibrium decay regions, the peak of the scale-by-scale energy transfer scales as $(overline{u^2})^{3/2}/ell$ ($overline{u^2}$ is the variance of the longitudinal fluctuating velocity). In the non-equilibrium case this scaling implies an imbalance between the energy transfer to the small scales and the dissipation. This imbalance is reflected on the small-scale advection which becomes larger in proportion to the maximum energy transfer as the turbulence decays whereas it stays proportionally constant in the further downstream equilibrium region where $C_{varepsilon} approx mathrm{constant}$ even though $Re_{ell}$ is lower.
The previously reported non-equilibrium dissipation law is investigated in turbulent flows generated by various regular and fractal square grids. The flows are documented in terms of various turbulent profiles which reveal their differences. In spite of significant inhomogeneity and anisotropy differences, the new non-equilibrium dissipation law is observed in all these flows. Various transverse and longitudinal integral scales are measured and used to define the dissipation coefficient $C_{varepsilon}$. It is found that the new non-equilibrium dissipation law is not an artefact of a particular choice of the integral scale and that the usual equilibrium dissipation law can actually coexist with the non-equilibrium law in different regions of the same flow.
180 - S. Knysh , V.N. Smelyanskiy 2008
We study the quantum version of the random $K$-Satisfiability problem in the presence of the external magnetic field $Gamma$ applied in the transverse direction. We derive the replica-symmetric free energy functional within static approximation and the saddle-point equation for the order parameter: the distribution $P[h(m)]$ of functions of magnetizations. The order parameter is interpreted as the histogram of probability distributions of individual magnetizations. In the limit of zero temperature and small transverse fields, to leading order in $Gamma$ magnetizations $m approx 0$ become relevant in addition to purely classical values of $m approx pm 1$. Self-consistency equations for the order parameter are solved numerically using Quasi Monte Carlo method for K=3. It is shown that for an arbitrarily small $Gamma$ quantum fluctuations destroy the phase transition present in the classical limit $Gamma=0$, replacing it with a smooth crossover transition. The implications of this result with respect to the expected performance of quantum optimization algorithms via adiabatic evolution are discussed. The replica-symmetric solution of the classical random $K$-Satisfiability problem is briefly revisited. It is shown that the phase transition at T=0 predicted by the replica-symmetric theory is of continuous type with atypical critical exponents.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا