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Suppressing thermalization and constructing weak solutions in truncated inviscid equations of hydrodynamics: Lessons from the Burgers equation

Sugan Durai Murugan, Uriel Frisch, Sergey Nazarenko, Nicolas Besse, Samriddhi Sankar Ray

2020Physical Review Research22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Finite-dimensional, inviscid equations of hydrodynamics, obtained through a Fourier-Galerkin projection, thermalize with an energy equipartition. Hence, numerical solutions of such inviscid equations, which typically must be Galerkin-truncated, show a behavior at odds with the parent equation. An important consequence of this is an uncertainty in the measurement of the temporal evolution of the distance of the complex singularity from the real domain leading to a lack of a firm conjecture on the finite-time blow-up problem in the incompressible, three-dimensional Euler equation. We now propose, by using the one-dimensional Burgers equation as a testing ground, a numerical recipe, named tyger purging, to arrest the onset of thermalization and hence recover the true dissipative solution. Our method, easily adapted for higher dimensions, provides a tool to not only tackle the celebrated blow-up problem but also to obtain weak and dissipative solutions-conjectured by Onsager and numerically elusive thus far-of the Euler equation.

Topics & Concepts

Inviscid flowDissipative systemBurgers' equationSingularityEuler equationsThermalisationDomain (mathematical analysis)Classical mechanicsPhysicsConjectureMathematicsMathematical analysisEuler systemEuler's formulaBoltzmann equationEnergy (signal processing)Statistical physicsBernoulli's principleGravitational singularityWeak solutionApplied mathematicsEulerian pathInertial frame of referenceLimit (mathematics)Numerical analysisBackward Euler methodNavier-Stokes equation solutionsComputational Fluid Dynamics and AerodynamicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
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