Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
Jani Dahl, Mark Hindmarsh, Kari Rummukainen, David Weir

TL;DR
This paper investigates the decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions through numerical simulations, revealing a self-similar energy spectrum and implications for gravitational wave signals from early universe phase transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a model for the decay of acoustic turbulence, extending it to three dimensions, and connects turbulence decay to gravitational wave spectrum predictions.
Findings
Energy spectrum evolves to a self-similar broken power law
High-wavenumber behavior follows approximately k^{-2.08}
Identifies a secondary scale in the gravitational wave spectrum
Abstract
Gravitational waves from a phase transition associated with the generation of the masses of elementary particles are within the reach of future space-based detectors such as LISA. A key determinant of the resulting power spectrum, not previously studied, is the lifetime of the acoustic turbulence which follows. We study decaying acoustic turbulence using numerical simulations of a relativistic fluid in two dimensions. Working in the limit of non-relativistic bulk velocities, with an ultra-relativistic equation of state, we find that the energy spectrum evolves towards a self-similar broken power law, with a high-wavenumber behaviour of , cut off at very high by the inverse width of the shock waves. Our model for the decay of acoustic turbulence can be extended to three dimensions using the universality of the high- power law and the evolution laws for the…
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