Transition to turbulence in quasi-two-dimensional MHD flow driven by lateral walls
Christopher J. Camobreco, Alban Poth\'erat, Gregory J. Sheard

TL;DR
This study explores how magnetic fields and lateral wall motion influence the transition to turbulence in quasi-two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic duct flows, revealing conditions for turbulence onset, saturation, and collapse.
Contribution
It introduces a model for quasi-2D MHD flow with lateral walls, analyzing how magnetic field strength and flow antisymmetry affect turbulence transition mechanisms.
Findings
Magnetic field limits instability interactions, enabling finite critical Reynolds numbers.
Turbulence occurs at moderate magnetic fields (H=3 to 10) and is short-lived at high fields (H≥30).
An inertial subrange with -5/3 power law is observed at H≥3.
Abstract
This manuscript has been accepted for publication in Physical Review Fluids, see https://journals.aps.org/prfluids/accepted/d5074S28J6b11905012b7cb06505e8f2149dd5f20. This work investigates the mechanisms that underlie transitions to turbulence in a three-dimensional domain in which the variation of flow quantities in the out-of-plane direction is much weaker than any in-plane variation. This is achieved using a model for the quasi-two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic flow in a duct with moving lateral walls and an orthogonal magnetic field. In this environment, conventional subcritical routes to turbulence, which are highly three-dimensional, are prohibited. To elucidate the remaining mechanisms involved in quasi-two-dimensional turbulent transitions, the magnetic field strength and degree of antisymmetry in the base flow are varied, the latter via the relative motion of the lateral…
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