Kinematic simulation of homogeneous turbulence by unsteady random Fourier modes
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 236, 281-318
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112092001423
Abstract
The velocity field of homogeneous isotropic turbulence is simulated by a large number (38–1200) of random Fourier modes varying in space and time over a large number (> 100) of realizations. They are chosen so that the flow field has certain properties, namely (i) it satisfies continuity, (ii) the two-point Eulerian spatial spectra have a known form (e.g. the Kolmogorov inertial subrange), (iii) the time dependence is modelled by dividing the turbulence into large- and small-scales eddies, and by assuming that the large eddies advect the small eddies which also decorrelate as they are advected, (iv) the amplitudes of the large- and small-scale Fourier modes are each statistically independent and each Gaussian. The structure of the velocity field is found to be similar to that computed by direct numerical simulation with the same spectrum, although this simulation underestimates the lengths of tubes of intense vorticity.Some new results and concepts have been obtained using this kinematic simulation: (a) for the inertial subrange (which cannot yet be simulated by other means) the simulation confirms the form of the Eulerian frequency spectrum , where ε,U0,ω are the rate of energy dissipation per unit mass, large-scale r.m.s. velocity, and frequency. For isotropic Gaussian large-scale turbulence at very high Reynolds number, CE ≈ 0.78, which is close to the computed value of 0.82; (b) for an observer moving with the large eddies the ‘Eulerian—Lagrangian’ spectrum is ϕEL11 = CELεω−2, where CEL ≈ 0.73; (c) for an observer moving with a fluid particle the Lagrangian spectrum ϕL11 = CLεω−2, where CL ≈ 0.8, a value consistent with the atmospheric turbulence measurements by Hanna (1981) and approximately equal to CEL; (d) the mean-square relative displacement of a pair of particles 〈Δ2〉 tends to the Richardson (1926) and Obukhov (1941) form 〈Δ2〉 = GΔεt3, provided that the subrange extends over four decades in energy, and a suitable origin is chosen for the time t. The constant GΔ is computed and is equal to 0.1 (which is close to Tatarski's 1960 estimate of 0.06); (e) difference statistics (i.e. displacement from the initial trajectory) of single particles are also calculated. The exact result that Y2 = GYεt3 with GY = 2πCL is approximately confirmed (although it requires an even larger inertial subrange than that for 〈Δ2〉). It is found that the ratio [Rscr ]G = 2〈Y2〉/〈Δ2〉≈ 100, whereas in previous estimates [Rscr ]G≈ 1, because for much of the time pairs of particles move together around vortical regions and only separate for the proportion of the time (of O(fc)) they spend in straining regions where streamlines diverge. It is estimated that [Rscr ]G ≈ O(fc−3). Thus relative diffusion is both a ‘structural’ (or ‘topological’) process as well as an intermittent inverse cascade process determined by increasing eddy scales as the particles separate; (f) statistics of large-scale turbulence are also computed, including the Lagrangian timescale, the pressure spectra and correlations, and these agree with predictions of Batchelor (1951), Hinzc (1975) and George et al. (1984).Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Description of Eddying Motions and Flow Patterns Using Critical-Point ConceptsAnnual Review of Fluid Mechanics, 1987
- Turbulent Diffusion from Sources in Complex FlowsAnnual Review of Fluid Mechanics, 1985
- Numerical Simulation of Turbulent FlowsAnnual Review of Fluid Mechanics, 1984
- Scalar diffusion in simulated helical turbulence with molecular diffusivityJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1984
- Turbulent pair dispersion and scalar diffusionJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1981
- On the dispersion of small particles suspended in an isotropic turbulent fluidJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1977
- Eulerian and Lagrangian time microscales in isotropic turbulenceJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1975
- Diffusion by a Random Velocity FieldPhysics of Fluids, 1970
- The statistical dynamics of homogeneous turbulenceJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1964
- Space-time double correlations and spectra in a turbulent boundary layerJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1957