Nonlinear phase synchronization and the role of spacing in shell models
Lorenzo Manfredini, \"Ozg\"ur D. G\"urcan

TL;DR
This paper explores how phase synchronization in shell models influences energy transfer and intermittency, revealing that phase alignment facilitates cascades and extreme events, with implications for understanding turbulence dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel phase analysis method using Kuramoto parameters to link phase coherence with intermittency and energy cascades in shell models.
Findings
Synchronization increases energy transfer and intermittency.
Local phase coherence detects burst-like energy flux events.
Phase organization is crucial for sustaining inverse energy cascades.
Abstract
A shell model can be considered as a chain of triads, where each triad can be interpreted as a nonlinear oscillator that can be mapped to a spinning top. Investigating the relation between phase dynamics and intermittency in a such a chain of nonlinear oscillators, it is found that synchronization is linked to increased energy transfer. In particular, the results provide evidence that the observed systematic increase of intermittency, as the shell spacing is decreased, is associated with strong phase alignment among consecutive triadic phases, facilitating the energy cascade. It is shown that while the overall level of synchronization can be quantified using a Kuramoto order parameter for the global phase coherence in the inertial range, a local, weighted Kuramoto parameter can be used for the detection of burst-like events propagating across shells in the inertial range. This novel…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Chaos control and synchronization · Solidification and crystal growth phenomena
