Spectral characterisation of inertial particle clustering in turbulence
N. E. L. Haugen, A. Brandenburg, C. Sandin, L. Mattsson

TL;DR
This study investigates how inertial particles cluster in compressible turbulence, revealing distinct mechanisms like shock interaction and centrifugal effects, with spectral tools providing insights into large-scale clustering behaviors.
Contribution
It compares particle clustering in compressively and vortically forced turbulence, highlighting the role of shock interactions and caustics, and introduces spectral analysis as a key tool for understanding clustering.
Findings
Shock interaction causes prominent clustering in spherical expansion wave turbulence.
Double-peaked spectral power distribution correlates with different clustering mechanisms.
Caustics are linked to inertial particle clustering and can be analyzed via Lagrangian methods.
Abstract
Clustering of inertial particles is important for many types of astrophysical and geophysical turbulence, but it has been studied predominately for incompressible flows. Here we study compressible flows and compare clustering in both compressively (irrotationally) and vortically (solenoidally) forced turbulence. Vortically and compressively forced flows are driven stochastically either by solenoidal waves or by circular expansion waves, respectively. For compressively forced flows, the power spectrum of the density of inertial particles is a useful tool for displaying particle clustering relative to the fluid density enhancement. Power spectra are shown to be particularly sensitive for studying large-scale particle clustering, while conventional tools such as radial distribution functions are more suitable for studying small-scale clustering. Our primary finding is that particle…
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