Identifying causal significance in three-dimensional isotropic turbulence
Miguel P. Encinar, Javier Jim\'enez

TL;DR
This study uses a novel algorithm to identify regions of causal significance in three-dimensional isotropic turbulence, revealing how local flow structures influence turbulence dynamics and suggesting targeted flow manipulation strategies.
Contribution
The paper introduces an application of Jiménez's (2018) algorithm to identify causally significant flow regions in turbulence, linking their size, structure, and dynamics to flow control implications.
Findings
Significant regions contain strong gradients and kinetic energy.
Strain propagates perturbations more effectively than vorticity.
Flow control should target strain-dominated vortex clusters.
Abstract
Flow patterns of causal significance to three-dimensional isotropic turbulence are identified through the recently introduced algorithm of Jim\'enez (2018). Localised perturbations are introduced at arbitrary regions of a triple-periodic decaying flow at , and their evolution is used as a marker of the significance of said regions to the flow. Their dimensions are found to be an important parameter, with sizes of the order of the integral scale being controlled by the kinetic energy content, and sizes within the dissipative range, by the enstrophy and dissipation. The three quantities are found to be important at intermediate (inertial) scales. Prominent differences emerge between regions of high and low significance. The former typically contain strong gradients and/or kinetic energy and the latter are weak. An analysis of the structure of significant and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations · Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics
