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Wave-anisotropy principle in near-resonant energy transfer in shear-flow turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

Global symmetry-breaking factors like three-dimensional (3D) shear flow, magnetic field, etc. introduce anisotropic linear physics, which renders turbulent structures anisotropic, a phenomenon called the wave-anisotropy principle. The principle is found to apply to the Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) and the Goldreich-Schubert-Fricke (GSF) instabilities.



The KH instability grows in 3D chiefly via 2D fluctuations; however, the system quickly becomes fully 3D by nonlinearly exciting fluctuations that vary only in the direction orthogonal to the 2D shear-flow plane. Such fluctuations, akin to the zonal flows of fusion plasmas, have near-zero frequencies. Thus, they near-resonantly transfer energy from KH-unstable to stable modes, endowing nonlinear transfer with anisotropy.



The GSF instability occurs in stars with gradients of destabilizing angular momentum and stabilizing density. When the buoyancy force is eliminated by fast thermal diffusion relative to viscous momentum diffusion the instability dominates. With KH-like anisotropic growth rate spectrum, the GSF instability saturates via a resonance provided by a near-zero-frequency mode, which couples to unstable modes. A thus-informed statistical closure model predicts turbulent transport rates, with which numerical simulations agree.

Presenters

  • Bindesh Tripathi

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

Authors

  • Bindesh Tripathi

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Paul W Terry

    UW Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA

  • Adrian J Barker

    University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK

  • Adrian E Fraser

    University of Colorado, Boulder, University of California, Santa Cruz, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA

  • Ellen Zweibel

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA

  • MJ Pueschel

    Eindhoven University of Technology; Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, 5612 AJ Eindhoven, The Netherlands; Eindhoven University of Technology, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands, Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, The Netherlands