Litcius/Paper detail

Extreme events in transitional turbulence

Sébastien Gomé, Laurette S. Tuckerman, Dwight Barkley

2022Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transitional localized turbulence in shear flows is known to either decay to an absorbing laminar state or to proliferate via splitting. The average passage times from one state to the other depend super-exponentially on the Reynolds number and lead to a crossing Reynolds number above which proliferation is more likely than decay. In this paper, we apply a rare-event algorithm, Adaptative Multilevel Splitting, to the deterministic Navier-Stokes equations to study transition paths and estimate large passage times in channel flow more efficiently than direct simulations. We establish a connection with extreme value distributions and show that transition between states is mediated by a regime that is self-similar with the Reynolds number. The super-exponential variation of the passage times is linked to the Reynolds number dependence of the parameters of the extreme value distribution. Finally, motivated by instantons from Large Deviation theory, we show that decay or splitting events approach a most-probable pathway. This article is part of the theme issue 'Mathematical problems in physical fluid dynamics (part 2)'.

Topics & Concepts

Reynolds numberTurbulenceStatistical physicsLaminar flowPhysicsReynolds decompositionMathematicsReynolds stress equation modelInstantonExtreme value theoryExponential decayFlow (mathematics)MechanicsK-epsilon turbulence modelK-omega turbulence modelReynolds equationMathematical physicsQuantum mechanicsStatisticsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent FlowsProbabilistic and Robust Engineering DesignSports Analytics and Performance