Statistical mechanics of two-dimensional Euler flows and minimum enstrophy states
A. Naso, P.H. Chavanis, B. Dubrulle

TL;DR
This paper uses a thermodynamic approach to analyze 2D Euler flows, deriving equilibrium states and relaxation equations, and explores phase transitions and metastable states with novel insights into negative specific heats.
Contribution
It introduces a statistical mechanics framework for 2D Euler flows based on microscopic enstrophy conservation, deriving new relaxation equations and analyzing phase transitions.
Findings
Gaussian vorticity fluctuations with linear mean flow relationship
Equivalence of entropy maximization and enstrophy minimization under certain constraints
Identification of metastable states with negative specific heats
Abstract
A simplified thermodynamic approach of the incompressible 2D Euler equation is considered based on the conservation of energy, circulation and microscopic enstrophy. Statistical equilibrium states are obtained by maximizing the Miller-Robert-Sommeria (MRS) entropy under these sole constraints. The vorticity fluctuations are Gaussian while the mean flow is characterized by a linear relationship. Furthermore, the maximization of entropy at fixed energy, circulation and microscopic enstrophy is equivalent to the minimization of macroscopic enstrophy at fixed energy and circulation. This provides a justification of the minimum enstrophy principle from statistical mechanics when only the microscopic enstrophy is conserved among the infinite class of Casimir constraints. A new class of relaxation equations towards the statistical equilibrium state is derived. These…
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