Intermittency of three-dimensional perturbations in a point-vortex model
Adrian van Kan, Alexandros Alexakis, Marc Etienne Brachet

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simple energy-conserving model coupling 2D point-vortex flow with 3D perturbations, analyzing their growth, intermittency, and feedback effects on the flow's temperature and energy distribution.
Contribution
It proposes a novel coupled model for 3D instabilities in 2D flows, revealing new intermittency phenomena and feedback mechanisms not previously understood.
Findings
Ergophage growth follows a power-law distribution with Levy flight characteristics.
The system exhibits a new type of on-off intermittency called Levy on-off intermittency.
Large ergophage amplitudes lead to a zero-temperature state in the 2D flow.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) instabilities on a (potentially turbulent) two-dimensional (2D) flow are still incompletely understood, despite recent progress. Here, based on known physical properties of such 3-D instabilities, we propose a simple, energy-conserving model describing this situation. It consists of a 2D point-vortex flow coupled to localized 3D perturbations (ergophages), such that ergophages can gain energy by altering vortex-vortex distances through an induced divergent velocity field, thus decreasing point-vortex energy. We investigate the model in three distinct stages of evolution: (i) The linear regime, where the ergophage amplitude grows or decays exponentially on average, with a randomly fluctuating instantaneous growth rate. The growth rate has a small auto-correlation time, and follows a probability distribution featuring a power-law tail with exponent between -2 and…
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