Topology and the Conformal Invariance of Nodal Lines in Two-Dimensional Active Scalar Turbulence
Christopher Eling

TL;DR
This paper explores the conformal invariance of nodal lines in 2D active scalar turbulence, linking turbulent flow structures to topological and conformal field theories, and proposing a model involving patches with scale-invariant properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel effective theory connecting turbulence, topology, and conformal invariance, with a model based on patches exhibiting power law scaling and Liouville conformal field theory.
Findings
Nodal isolines obey Schramm-Loewner evolution (SLE).
Turbulent states are characterized by topological winding numbers.
The model predicts a conformally invariant sector described by Liouville CFT.
Abstract
The inverse cascade in two-dimensional hydrodynamic turbulence exhibits a mysterious phenomenon. Numerical simulations have shown that the nodal isolines of certain scalars actively transported in the flow (eg, the vorticity in Navier-Stokes theory) obey Schramm-Loewner evolution (SLE), which indicates the presence of conformal invariance. Therefore, these turbulent isolines are somehow in the same class as cluster boundaries in equilibrium statistical mechanical models at criticality, such as critical percolation. In this paper, we propose that the inverse cascade is characterized by a local energy (or in some cases, enstrophy) flux field that spontaneously breaks time reversal invariance. The turbulent state consists of random constant flux domains, with the nodal isolines acting as domain walls where the local flux vanishes. The generalized circulation of the domains is proportional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations
