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From snapshots to manifolds – a tale of shear flows

E. Farzamnik, Andrea Ianiro, Stefano Discetti, Nan Deng, Kilian Oberleithner, Bernd R. Noack, Vanesa Guerrero

2023Journal of Fluid Mechanics38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We propose a novel nonlinear manifold learning from snapshot data and demonstrate its superiority over proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) for shedding-dominated shear flows. Key enablers are isometric feature mapping, Isomap, as encoder and, $K$ -nearest neighbours ( $K$ NN) algorithm as decoder. The proposed technique is applied to numerical and experimental datasets including the fluidic pinball, a swirling jet and the wake behind a couple of tandem cylinders. Analysing the fluidic pinball, the manifold is able to describe the pitchfork bifurcation and the chaotic regime with only three feature coordinates. These coordinates are linked to the vortex-shedding phases and the force coefficients. The manifold coordinates of the swirling jet are comparable to the POD mode amplitudes, yet allow for a more distinct and less noise-sensitive manifold identification. A similar observation is made for the wake of two tandem cylinders. The tandem cylinders are aligned and located at a streamwise distance which corresponds to the transition between the single bluff body and the reattachment regimes of vortex shedding. Isomap unveils these two shedding regimes while the Lissajous plot of the first two POD mode amplitudes features a single circle. The reconstruction error of the manifold model is small compared with the fluctuation level, indicating that the low embedding dimensions contain the coherent structure dynamics. The proposed Isomap– $K$ NN manifold learner is expected to be of great importance in estimation, dynamic modelling and control for a large range of configurations with dominant coherent structures.

Topics & Concepts

WakePhysicsDynamic mode decompositionReynolds numberIsomapNonlinear dimensionality reductionInvariant manifoldMechanicsClassical mechanicsMathematical analysisComputer scienceDimensionality reductionTurbulenceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceModel Reduction and Neural NetworksFluid Dynamics and Vibration AnalysisFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
From snapshots to manifolds – a tale of shear flows | Litcius