Beyond Mixing-length Theory: a step toward 321D
W. David Arnett, Casey Meakin, Maxime Viallet, Simon W. Campbell, John, Lattanzio, Miroslav Moc\'ak

TL;DR
This paper develops a new 3D turbulence-based algorithm to replace mixing-length theory in stellar models, providing more physically accurate descriptions of convection and boundary layers without calibration.
Contribution
It introduces a 321D turbulence model based on Navier-Stokes solutions, capturing non-local, dynamic effects and boundary behaviors absent in traditional MLT.
Findings
Braking regions appear beyond convection boundaries.
Non-zero turbulent kinetic energy flux is observed.
Composition gradients significantly influence flow dynamics.
Abstract
We examine the physical basis for algorithms to replace mixing-length theory (MLT) in stellar evolutionary computations. Our 321D procedure is based on numerical solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations. These implicit large eddy simulations (ILES) are three-dimensional (3D), time-dependent, and turbulent, including the Kolmogorov cascade. We use the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) formulation to make concise the 3D simulation data, and use the 3D simulations to give closure for the RANS equations. We further analyze this data set with a simple analytical model, which is non-local and time-dependent, and which contains both MLT and the Lorenz convective roll as particular subsets of solutions. A characteristic length (the damping length) again emerges in the simulations; it is determined by an observed balance between (1) the large-scale driving, and (2) small-scale damping.…
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