The role of periodic orbits and bubbles of chaos during the transition to turbulence
S. Altmeyer, A. P. Willis, B. Hof

TL;DR
This paper investigates the role of relative periodic orbits and chaos bubbles in the transition to turbulence, revealing how these invariant solutions influence turbulent dynamics and lifetime.
Contribution
It identifies new long-period RPOs and analyzes their interaction with chaos bubbles, expanding understanding of turbulence structure without strict symmetry constraints.
Findings
Discovery of a weakly repelling long-period RPO
Turbulent trajectories often shadow the RPO
Merger of saddles increases turbulence lifetime
Abstract
Starting with turbulence that explores a wide region in phase space, we discover several relative periodic orbits (RPOs) embedded within a subregion of the chaotic turbulent saddle. We also extract directly from simulation, several travelling waves (TWs). These TWs together with the RPOs are unstable states and are believed to provide the skeleton of the chaotic saddle. Earlier studies have shown that such invariant solutions can help to explain wall bounded shear flows, and a finite subset of them are expected to dominate the dynamics (Faisst & Eckhardt 2003; Pringle & Kerswell 2007; Hof et al. 2004). The introduction of symmetries is typically necessary to facilitate this approach. Applying only the shift-reflect symmetry, the geometry is less constrained than previous studies in pipe flow. A 'long-period' RPO is identified that is only very weakly repelling. Turbulent trajectories…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
