Universality and scaling in compressible turbulence
Diego A. Donzis, John Panickacheril John

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that universal scaling laws in compressible turbulence emerge when considering additional internal dilatational scales, expanding the understanding beyond traditional parameters like the Reynolds number.
Contribution
The study introduces a new framework including internal dilatational scales to achieve universal scaling laws in compressible turbulence, supported by extensive numerical data.
Findings
Universal scaling observed with expanded parameter set including dilatational scales
Previous scaling laws fail in general compressible turbulence cases
Identification of classes of flow evolution in new parameter space
Abstract
Turbulent flows, ubiquitous in nature and engineering, comprise fluctuations over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. While flows with fluctuations in thermodynamic variables are much more common, much less is known about these flows than their incompressible counterparts in which thermodynamics is decoupled from hydrodynamics. A critical element in the study of the latter has been the concept of universal scaling laws which provides fundamental as well as practical information about the spatio-temporal behavior of these complex systems. Part of this success is due to the dependence on a single non-dimensional parameter, that is the Reynolds number. Universality in compressible flows, on the other hand, have proven to be more elusive as no unifying set of parameters were found to yield universal scaling laws. This severely limits our understanding of these flows and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
