Does dissipative anomaly hold for compressible turbulence?
ORAL
Abstract
We systematically study dissipative anomaly in compressible turbulence
using a DNS database spanning a large parameter space, and show that the
classical incompressible scaling does not hold for the total
dissipation field. We assess the scaling for the solenoidal and
dilatational parts separately. The solenoidal dissipation obeys the same
scaling as incompressible turbulence when rescaled on solenoidal variables.
We propose new scaling laws for total dissipation that predict the transition
between regimes dominated by the solenoidal and dilatational components, and
confirm them by the DNS data. An analysis of dilatational dissipation shows
that dissipative anomaly may hold
if properly scaled for certain regimes; on this empirical basis, we propose
a new criterion for the energy cascade in the dilatational component.
using a DNS database spanning a large parameter space, and show that the
classical incompressible scaling does not hold for the total
dissipation field. We assess the scaling for the solenoidal and
dilatational parts separately. The solenoidal dissipation obeys the same
scaling as incompressible turbulence when rescaled on solenoidal variables.
We propose new scaling laws for total dissipation that predict the transition
between regimes dominated by the solenoidal and dilatational components, and
confirm them by the DNS data. An analysis of dilatational dissipation shows
that dissipative anomaly may hold
if properly scaled for certain regimes; on this empirical basis, we propose
a new criterion for the energy cascade in the dilatational component.
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Publication: Does dissipative anomaly hold for compressible turbulence?<br>J.P. John, D.A. Donzis, K.R. Sreenivasan, J. Fluid Mech, 920, A20, 2021.
Presenters
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Diego A Donsiz
Texas A&M University, Texas A&M
Authors
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Diego A Donsiz
Texas A&M University, Texas A&M
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John Panickacheril John
Texas A&M University
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K. R Sreenivasan
New York Univ NYU