Cascades and transitions in turbulent flows
A. Alexakis, L. Biferale

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in understanding the complex cascade mechanisms in turbulent flows, highlighting various transfer scenarios, their dependence on control parameters, and implications for turbulence modeling.
Contribution
It provides a unified classification of all known transfer mechanisms and transitions in turbulence, including new scenarios like split, dual, and bi-directional cascades, across diverse flow configurations.
Findings
Identification of multiple cascade types and transitions in turbulence.
Analysis of how control parameters influence cascade behavior.
Discussion of anomalous scaling and intermittency in energy dissipation.
Abstract
Turbulence is characterized by the non-linear cascades of energy and other inviscid invariants across a huge range of scales, from where they are injected to where they are dissipated. Recently, new experimental, numerical and theoretical works have revealed that many turbulent configurations deviate from the ideal 3D/2D isotropic cases characterized by the presence of a strictly direct/inverse energy cascade, respectively. We review recent works from a unified point of view and we present a classification of all known transfer mechanisms. Beside the classical cases of direct and inverse cascades, the different scenarios include: split cascades to small and large scales simultaneously, multiple/dual cascades of different quantities, bi-directional cascades where direct and inverse transfers of the same invariant coexist in the same scale-range and finally equilibrium states where no…
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