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Thèse de doctorat/ PhD Thesis Citation APA:
Teaca, B. (2010). Numerical simulations of transport processes in magnetohydrodynamic turbulence (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Université libre de Bruxelles, Faculté des Sciences – Physique, Bruxelles.
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D 03729
SITATEA DIN CRAIOVA UNIVERSITE LIBRE DE BRUXELLES
BOGDAN TEACÀ
DOCTORAL THESIS
Scientific adviser: Universitatea din Craiova, C.S. I dr. Bucur Dan GRECU Scientific adviser: Université Libre De Bruxelles, Prof. univ. dr. Daniele CARATI
CRAIOVA BRUSSELS
2010
Jniversite Libre d e Bruxelles
II 1 1
0034B313 eilII il
Université Libre de Bruxelles
&
Universitatea din Craiova
D octoral T hesis
Numerical simulations of transport processes in magnetohydrodynamic
turbulence
Author:
Bogdan Teacâ
Supervisor:
Daniele Carati
Supervisor:
Dan Grecu
21 July 2010
\
Contents
Acknowledgments 4
Préfacé 5
I The physics of turbulence 8
1 Phenomenology of turbulence 9
1.1 Intuitive reasoning ... 9
1.2 Turbulence in nature ... 11
1.3 Historical highlights in turbulence study... 14
1.4 Empirical laws of turbulence... 17
2 Theory of turbulence 20 2.1 The évolution équations... 20
2.2 Symmetry groups... 25
2.3 Conservation laws... 28
2.4 Turbulence in spectral space... 33
2.4.1 The spectral space... 33
2.4.2 The évolution équations in spectral space... 36
2.4.3 Energy balance in spectral space... 39
2.5 Scaling laws for fluid turbulence... 40
2.6 Scaling laws for MHD turbulence ... 46
II Magnetohydrodynamic turbulence study 50 3 Numerical implémentation 51 3.1 Spectral methods... 51
3.1.1 Space discretization ... 52
3.1.2 Time discretization... 54
3.1.3 Computing the nonlinear ternis... 57
3.2 Eorce implémentation... 58
3.2.1 Hydrodynamic forcing mechanism... 59
1
CONTENTS 2
3.2.2 Magnetohydrodynamic forcing mechanism... 62
3.3 Magnetohydrodynamic stationary States... 64
3.3.1 Imbalanced turbulence... 64
3.3.2 Kinematic forced MHD turbulence ... 65
4 Energy transfers between scales 69 4.1 OverView of the problem... 69
4.2 The équations... 71
4.3 Transfers between modes... 73
4.4 Spectral space décomposition... 75
4.4.1 Arbitrary subdomain décomposition... 76
4.4.2 Shell décomposition... 80
4.4.3 Ring décomposition ... 82
4.5 Numeric results... 87
4.5.1 Isotropie steady State turbulence... 87
4.5.2 Anisotropic steady State turbulence... 94
5 Scale locality in turbulence 110 5.1 Stating the problem... 110
5.2 Locality fonctions... 113
5.2.1 Kraichnan locality fonctions... 113
5.2.2 Locality fonctions from DNS... 115
5.3 Locality in hydrodynamic turbulence... 118
5.4 Locality in magnetohydrodynamic turbulence... 124
III Charged particle transport 131 6 Particle trajectory tracking 132 6.1 OverView... 132
6.2 A Newtonian particle motion... 133
6.3 Charged particle motion ... 134
6.3.1 Uniform constant fields... 135
6.3.2 Aspects of adiabatic motion... 138
6.4 Numerical implémentation... 140
6.4.1 Solver schemes... 140
6.4.2 Interpolation methods ... 141
6.4.3 Field approximation type... 145
6.5 Numerical test case... 145
7 Particle transport in em turbulence 152 7.1 Transport concepts ... 152
7.2 Trajectories in turbulent electromagnetic fields... 155
7.3 Transport in turbulent magnetic fields ... 159
CONTENTS 3
Conclusions and perspectives 166
Bibliography 168
Acknowledgments
The présent doctoral thesis represents the culmination of a long and arduous road, during which I had the support of many wonderful people. I will always be grateful to them and I would like to thank ail the people that help me to reach this stage.
I would like to thank professor Dan Grecu for accepting to be my co-adviser for the joint doctoral program.
I would also like to acknowledge professor Daniele Carati. As a co-adviser, it was due to him that I started this line of work. It was a pleasure to work with him on so many projects and leam from one of the best teachers in the field. He opened many doors for me and started may of the collaborations in which I took part. Re- lated to his support, I would like to acknowledge Université Libre de Bruxelles and the Statistical and Plasma Physics group for their financial assistance, which allowed me to concentrate on my work. Daniele, thank you for ail!
Most of ail, I would like to thank my parents and my family for investing in my future and for their uninterrupted support.
Mai mult decat orice, as dori sa multumesc parintilor mei si familiei mele pentru ca au investi in viitorul meu si pentru sprijinul lor neintrerupt.
4
Préfacé
The strong couplings between different scales in a flow represent one of the pri- mary attributes of turbulence. They are expressed mathematically by the non-linear terms that enter the fluid balance équations and, in the turbulent régime, dominate the dynamics of the flow. In three-dimensional fluid turbulence, these couplings are the channel used to transfer the kinetic energy from the large geometry dépendent scales to the small scales associated with dissipative effects. This energy exchange between scales is known as the Richardson cascade. The universal properties of highly developed hydrodynamic turbulence proposed by Kolmogorov, relies im- plicitly on the Richardson cascade to be a local in scale process in the inertial range. That is to say, the energy from one scale is transferred to an adjacent scale by the interaction of comparable scales. By multiple, successive exchanges, the information related to larges scales will be destroyed and the classical assumptions of isotropy and universality of small scales will be valid. On the other hand, if the transfers would be nonlocal. Le. transfers involving scales of highly different size compared to local ones, which couple directly large and small scales, the charac- teristics related to the large scales will not be destroyed fast enough for the small scales to exhibit universality properties and the classical picture of turbulence will be weakened or even lost. Without locality, turbulent flows would be strongly influ- enced by large-scale forcing or geometrical properties of the boundaries throughout the cascade, making a general theory of turbulence impossible.
In magnetohydrodynamics (MHD), the Lorentz force influences the momen- tum balance équation and the number of non-linear terms is four instead of one like in the case of nonconductive fluid turbulence. This physical phenomenon is described by the union between hydrodynamics and electrodynamics in the clas
sical mechanics limit and is characterized by non-linear équations. The varions channels generated by the nonlinear terms can then be used to transfer the energy from the large scales to the dissipative range. In the MHD case, the problem com- plicates itself even more as new idéal invariants exists, with implications in the dynamics of the évolution équations. A good description of the energy redistribu
tion among scales is crucial for the development of adéquate turbulence models.
The energy transfers in both fluid and MHD turbulence are usually presented in spectral space by computing the energy exchanges between the Fourier modes. The energy transfers between modes in turbulence are completely characterized by triad interactions. However, for strong turbulence régimes, the total number of modes
5
CONTENTS 6 active in the System is too large to be represented systematically by the triad inter
actions. Since the majority of modes hâve similar properties as their wave-number neighbors and bring similar contribution to the energy exchange between scales, the analysis of energy transfers is usually simplified by partitioning the spectral space into sub-domains and look at the averaged energy transfers between these sub-domains. The partitioning of the spectral domain is arbitrary but several conve- nient geometrical structures are preferred. The spectral spherical symmetry présent in the case of isotropie turbulence naturally suggests a décomposition of the spec
tral domain into wave-number shells. For this case the energy transfer is described in ternis of shell-to-shell transfer fonctions and spherical energy fluxes that hâve been studied in detail. In the presence of a mean magnetic field, the flow develops a preferred direction and exhibits anisotropy. The degree of anisotropy dépends on the strength of the mean magnetic field. The angular dependence with respect to the preferred direction then becomes as relevant as the wave vector amplitude in the spectral space partition, and a simple shell décomposition is not sufficient for getting a more detailed picture of energy transfers. Coaxial cylindrical domains aligned with the preferred direction and planar domains transverse to each direc
tion hâve both been used in the past to partition the spectral space. In the current Work, another partition that is based on a ring décomposition of shells is proposed.
This novel approach provides many details on the energy transfers in an anisotropic System. Moreover, it allows to recover easily the isotropie shell transfer functions which hâve been extensively studied in literature. The ring décomposition pro
posed here is idéal for any form of anisotropic System.
The main goal of this thesis is to investigate the energy transport between scales using direct numerical simulations (DNS) of MHD turbulence. The locality prop
erties of energy transport among scales for isotropie and anisotropic turbulence, generated by the presence of a constant magnetic field, is emphasize. A secondary objective is to establish a framework for the study of charged test particles trans
port in a turbulent electromagnetic field, i.e. an electromagnetic field generated by the motion of a conductive fluid, which possess multiple scale structures.
The thesis consists of three parts totaling seven chapters. A préfacé and after- word accompanies the présentation without being regarded as chapters themselves.
The structure of the thesis is presented in detail below, synthesizing each chapter separately. In the first part, consisting of the first two chapters, the author intro- duces concepts of turbulence, both hydrodynamic and magneto-hydrodynamics.
The first two chapters are chapters of synthesis. The first chapter is meant as a way to familiarize the reader with the phenomenon of turbulence, without resort- ing to a mathematical formalism. Starting instead from the physical intuition of an average scientist and from the observations of turbulence in nature, the necessary concepts are presented. The second chapter présents the theoretical description of magneto-hydrodynamic turbulence. MHD équations are introduced in real space and the symmetry properties and conservation laws are listed. The spectral form of these équations is obtained and a theoretical analysis, using dimensional argu
ments, présents the few theoretical prédictions available.
CONTENTS 7 The second part is the main source of original results. Chapter three introduces the numerical methods used in solving équations, namely the pseudo-spectral meth- ods. A new type of force, which imposes the level of dissipation of ail idéal invariants, is introduced. In this way, the dynamics of the évolution équations are partially controlled. This approach allows for a systematic study of energy transfer fluid between different scales. In chapter four, an integrated energy trans
fer analysis of different scales of MHD turbulence is made. The energy transfer formalism is introduced. To investigate the energy transfer, the spectral space is decomposed into a sériés of wavenumber shells. The average energy transfers be
tween these shells are then investigated. For anisotropic Systems, the novel idea of spectral space décomposition in ring structures is presented and the analysis of energy transfer between these structures is presented. For isotropie turbulence, in chapter five, the locality of energy fluxes is investigated using locality fonctions.
For the hydrodynamic case these fonctions give an asymptotic scaling exponent of 4/3 in according with prédictions given by closure théories. MHD turbulence, is found to hâve a more pronounced nonlocal behavior.
In the last part, which consists of chapters six and seven, the formalism for tracking trajectories of charged particles evolving in turbulent electromagnetic field is introduced. Chapter six concentrâtes on a problem of numerical nature, namely the influence on the particle solver of the interpolation method used. The final chapter, chapter seven, présents concepts related to the particle transport and diffu
sion régimes. The adiabatic nature of the charged particles motion is discussed and the transport of charged particle in a turbulent magnetic field is shown as example.
Part I
The physics of turbulence
8
Chapter 1
Phenomenology of turbulence
1.1 Intuitive reasoning
The study of turbulence, like ail other research topics in the field of natural sci
ences, began with observations of the world around us. Columns of smoke rising from tires, swirls of water in rapid rivers, plumes of ash expelled by erupting vol- canoes and the clouds in the sky are only a few typical occurrences that show clear signs of turbulent behavior. But what is really turbulence as a physical phe- nomenon? How does it form and how do we describe it? In this section we will try to introduce the concept of turbulence starting purely from physical intuition without the use of any mathematical formulation.
To start, we note that when we think about turbulence we almost always hâve in mind pictures of smoke or clouds and wrongly think of them as being turbulent.
In fact, the medium itself is turbulent, in this case the surrounding air, while the smoke or cloud vapors are just moved along in an action known as advection.
In this situation, the smoke or vapors are known as tracers* as they permit us to see the turbulent nature of the medium, as they trace a complex path when being subjected to the advective motion^. The rare instances in which we notice directly the turbulent nature of the medium, like in the case of rapid water flows, are due to changes in the light reflection on the extemal flow surface, which in this case séparâtes the water from air.
To understand turbulence, we must first look at a flow in complété absence of turbulence. In such a State, a flow is called laminar. Typically reserved for relatively slow moving flows, highly viscous fluids or small size flows, this State is quite rare in nature when compared to its turbulent contra-part. If in a laminar flow at rest we introduce a tracer, we observe the slow, omnidirectional diffusion of the tracer in that medium. Even if we start with a strange shaped tracer blob, ' A more technical name for the tracers is passive scalars as they do not influence the turbulent
behavior. If the scalars influence the turbulent motion, then they should be considered as being part of the medium itself or the entire System should be looked at in the multi-fluid approach.
^ For the advective motion to be seen, the diffusion of the tracer in the medium should be extremely small. Turbulent scales smaller then the tracers diffusively scale, will not be perceived.
9
CHAPTER 1. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 10 the diffusion motion will eventually smooth out any structures until a uniform, homogenous distribution of the tracer in the medium is observed. The same type of motion occurs for the fluid medium itself. This is due to viscosity, a measure of the resistivity of the flow to uneven' motion tendencies. Due to viscous effects, any small irregularity in the flow will be smoothen out. For higher level of viscosity this behavior will be more pronounced. To better visualize this process, one can think of this effect as happening mainly at a particular scale, a viscous scale. If we introduce a motion to the flow at a scale smaller than this, the motion will be immediately dampened. We see that for uneven motion to exist its size should be larger then the viscous scale. The larger the scale of motion, the less pronounced will the smoothing effect due to viscosity be and the initial motion perturbation will take longer to be attenuated. Of course, large initial perturbations will take longer to subside. Due to viscosity, ail turbulent Systems tend toward a laminar State.
In the above paragraph, we hâve introduced in our reasoning the idea of scales.
The physical condition necessary for turbulence to occur, but not sufficient in itself, is that ail the scales of the flow are coupled together. The fact that ail scales are coupled does not mean that ail motion scales are active or excited^. This property characterizes the physics of turbulence, but this is also the main cause for compli
cations regarding its study. In the absence of viscosity-^, any initial perturbation of a given intensity will be transferred by the coupling between scales until ail of them, even initially dormant ones, reach a State of equipartition. In this State, ail scales possess the same piece of the perturbation intensity, or simply put, in an equiparti
tion State the initial perturbation energy is equally split between ail scales. In this situation the smallest scale is theoretically infinitely small, while the large scales are bounded by the System size, e.g. the size of the Earth bounds the size of the atmospheric turbulence potentially possible. This theoretical case represents the quintessential turbulent State, an everlasting exchange of energy between motion scales.
Now, let us look at the entire picture and consider the flow of a common fluid^, which possesses a great number of scales larger than the viscous one. We consider the flow to be initially in a laminar State. Due to numerous causes related to the flow geometry, température and density gradients or uneven body forces, instabilities tend to form in the flow. Without the initial instabilities or if the viscosity can damp quickly the induced motion, a laminar flow will tend to stay in a laminar State even though a large range of scales is available in the System. In the situation when the instabilities are generated at a sufficiently large scale, the scale coupling will advect their effect to the adjacent range of scales. The instabilities will grow ' Shear stresses due to velocity gradients.
^ The intensity of the motion, measured by the kinetic energy, can be zéro for a particular scale.
This theoretical medium is known as a Euler flow and is physically different from a flow possessing even an infinitely small level of viscosity.
■* Some spécial fluids, like corn syrup, poses a different response to sheer-stresses which can not be accounted just by visco.sity. They are known as non-Newtonian fluids.
CHAPTER 1. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 11 in the System, populating more and more motion scales and the laminar State will be lost. For the laminar flow, this can be seen at first as an oscillatory, sinuous motion of the flow that amplifies until any form of large scale pattern is lost. This latter stage we call fully developed turbulence, where similar initial perturbation will give completely different results in the flow’s évolution.
To answer our initial questions, turbulence represents the phenomena of prop
agation of an motion between the different scales of a flow. It is formed by motion instabilities that propagate until they populate the entire range of scales available.
In the absence of instabilities due to strong viscous effects or if the instability source is tumed off, the flow will tend towards the laminar State, a situation known as decaying turbulence. We are just left with the non-trivial task of describing tur
bulence. For this, we turn first to empirical observations of flows in nature, before embarking on the path of mathematical reasoning.
1.2 Turbulence in nature
Although the coupling between scales represents one the main property of turbu
lence, turbulent flows are not universal in appearance at large scales. The large scales of a flow tends to dépend more on the geometry of the problem and the size of the System then anything else. In Figure 1.1 we clearly see that the cloud vortices generated by the island obstacle are of the same diameter as the island it- self and hâve little to do with the size of turbulent structures already présent in the flow. In this example, the vortex structures part of the vortex Street can be seen as precursory to turbulence and even though their propagation is related to the same advective motion responsible for turbulence, may people do not consider this mo
tion behavior as being turbulent on its own. In the top right corner of Figure 1.1 we observe a multi scaled cloud pattern, more generally associated with turbu
lence. The vortices can be seen as seeds of turbulence as they will brake down into smaller and smaller structures, cascading energy to ever smaller scales in a typical behavior of turbulence, until the dissipative effects due to viscosity can take over and attenuate the entire motion. However, for quasi two-dimensional flows gen
erated by the effects of gravity or planetary axial rotation, there is a tendency for small vortices to join up in forming large vortex structures that tend to dominate the System.
Due to its appearance, sometimes, people misinterpret turbulence as having a chaotic, random behavior. This is far from being true. In fact, one of the defin- ing characteristics of turbulence consists in the cohérent structures being présent at ail scale. This can be best seen while looking at Jupiter atmospheric turbulence.
Figure 1.2. The large red eddy, known as Jupiters Great Red Spot, not only is correlated in space, being the size of Earth, but is also correlated in time. It has been suggested that the Great Red Spot will survive for thousand of years’. In ' A flow structure that tends to exist in a région of space for long tintes compared to typical times of
interest in the flow are called zonal flows.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 12
Figure 1.1: Landsat 7 satellite image of clouds off the Chilean coast near the Juan Fernandez Islands on 15 September 1999. A pattern usually présent for flows around cylindrical obstacles called a von Karman vortex Street is observed. Here, the cylinder is replaced by Alejandro Selkirk Island. The island is about 1.5 km in diameter, and rises 1.6 km into a layer of marine stratocumulus clouds. Source:
NASA.
the same pictures, due to the shear stress induced by the differential rotation of the atmosphère, one can see rows of turbulent eddies that tend to interact among themselves. The Great Red Spot was formed by the merging of small vortexes, a typical action in the gravity stratified planetary atmosphère. We can now dénoté a characteristics for a flow to be considered turbulent. For fully developed turbu
lence we observe a large number of different flow structures which show signs of corrélation between scales.
Until now we hâve looked only at turbulent flows that are electrically non- conductive even though nature abounds in electrically conductive flows in tenu of plasmas. A plasma is an ionized medium which easily conducts electric currents but, due to self screening of ions and électrons, is electro-neutral, i.e. does not pos- sess local charges. In general, the forces that keep the ions and électrons together and enforce the electro-neutrality of a plasma are so strong that even emerged in an
CHAPTER 1. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 13
Figure 1.2: Left: Multi-frame mosaic of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot taken by Voy
ager I on 03 March 1979. Slightly smaller than Earths moon, Europa is visible to the right of in this. Source: NASA/JPL and Michael Benson, Kinetikon Pictures.
Right: True color mosaic of Jupiter constructed from images taken by the narrow angle caméra onboard NASA’s Cassini spacecraft on 29 December 2000. Jupiter here looks the way that the human eye would see it and is the most detailed global color portrait of Jupiter ever produced to date. Source: NASA/JPL/SSI.
extemal electric field the plasma will not expérience charge séparation. However, the ease with which an electric current is propagated makes the plasma easily sus
ceptible to magnetic fields influences. For a plasma' in the presence of a magnetic field, an extra body force in the form of the Lorentz force will act on the flow. Not only that, but the turbulent eddies generated current will induce a self-consistent magnetic field that will in tum influence the subséquent flow motion. Plasma tur
bulence now has to be studied in term of magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD) as the induced magnetic field structure has to be considered. This is the typical situa
tion for galactic clouds, interstellar medium, solar physics and Earth ionosphère.
The best source of magneto-hydrodynamic turbulence can be seen by observing the Sun, Figure 1.3. Turbulent structures are trapped by strong magnetic fields, ed
dies are stretched and elongated and magnetic field fines reconnect releasing huge amounts of energy in the process. In general, MHD turbulence is at the base of numerous important phenomena like the génération of the Earth magnetosphere by means of the dynamo effect in the planet’s core and, trough the process of parti- cle accélération by the turbulent magnetic field, the génération of the solar wind, itself a MHD turbulent medium. In astrophysics, MHD turbulence is responsible for galactic level magnetic fields, which evolve at characteristic time scales of mil- lennia and are obtained by preferential collapse of turbulent protogalactic plasma clouds.
Although we hâve presented only a few cases of turbulence in nature, its effects are présent in one form or another ail around us. From an anthropological view, understanding the phenomenon of turbulence is important for the advancement of technological knowhow in fields like aeronautics, metallurgy and energy genera- ' We only look at plasmas in the one-fluid approximation and neglect such effects as ambipolar
diffusion and Hall effects.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 14
Figure 1.3: Left: Careful processed ultraviolet data of the Sun, obtained from space probes on 30 July 1999, gives this picture approaching true color. Source:
TRACE Project, Stanford-Lockheed Institute for Space Research, NASA, Michael Benson, Kinetikon Pictures. Right: This image shows in great detail a solar prominence taken from a 30 March 2010 éruption. The twisting motion of the plasma trapped in the magnetic field is the most noticeable feature. Source:
NASA/SDO/AIA.
tion and also in our ability to predict and control the weather, both atmospheric and solar’. For the later, the understanding of magneto-hydrodynamic turbulence is crucial.
1.3 Historical highlights in turbulence study
In the following section we will list a few important highlights in the history of turbulence study. It is not intended as an exhaustive historical account or even a complété one, but rather as a way of presenting the ideas that changed the way people looked at the field of turbulence.
The phenomena of turbulence is so common in nature, that stands to reason that early man would off be fascinated by the intricate and sometimes beautiful patterns it produces. Neolithic spiral patterns, and similar motives from ail over the world would indicate a fascination of early man with the sinuous, curved Unes so présent in the flow of water. Regardless, the first observations of turbulence, and not Just ' With our increasing dependency on satellites for every days activities, like communication and
navigation, protecting them from solar storms effects is becoming a growing interest.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 15
Figure 1.4: One of Leonardo da Vinci’s drawings of turbulent flows.
hydrostatic fluids, is credited to Leonardo da Vinci’, who looked at the phenomena of turbolenza. Regarding turbulence, Leonardo da Vinci States:
Observe the motion of the surface ofthe water, which resembles that of hoir, which has two motions, of which one is caused by the weight ofthe hoir, the other by the direction ofthe curls; thus the water has eddying motions, one part of which is due to the principal current, the other to random and reverse motion.
A few drawings from that time, shown in Figure 1.4, depicts observation of wa
ter flowing around an obstacle, a preferred way of generating turbulence in en
gineering applications even today. These drawings represent the first systematic observation of the phenomena in an attempt to better understand it.
Off course, fluid turbulence can not be completely separated from the broader study of fluid dynamics and the mathematical framework of continuum media, so ' Lived: ISApril 1452-2 May 1519.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 16 people like Archimedes, Pascal, Newton, Bernoulli, d’Alembert, Euler, Navier and Stokes, to name just a few, brought contributions to the development of turbulence study. However, none of them set out as a goal to understand the underling phe- nomena behind it. The first attempt to do so, in modem science, was done by Osborne Reynolds*. He studied the conditions in which a pipe flow transitioned from laminar flow to turbulent flow, introducing the dimensionless Reynolds num- ber, the ratio of inertial forces to viscous forces, as the control parameter. Reynolds also introduced what is now known as Reynolds-averaging of turbulent flows, by expressing quantities like the velocity and pressure as the sum of mean and fluctuat- ing components. Applying the Reynolds-averaging to the Navier-Stokes équations, permits us to describe the movement of the bulk of a turbulent flow.
Another important step in the study of turbulence was done by Lewis Fry Richardson^. As an meteorologist he introduced the idea of eddies in describing turbulence as the interaction of vortex stmctures of different sizes. More impor- tantly he saw turbulence as the process where a large eddie brakes into multiple smaller eddies and passing them its entire energy. The subséquent eddies will themselves brake into even smaller eddies, again without the loss of energy, until a scale is reached where the dissipation due to viscosity transforms the motion ki- netic energy into beat. The entire process is known now as the Richardson cascade.
Inspired by a poem of Johathan Swift, Richardson wrote, Big whorls hâve Utile whorls Thatfeed on their velocity.
And Utile whorls hâve lesser whorls And so on to viscosity.
- Lewis F. Richardson
It was later that Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov^ formulated the classical picture of turbulence, by relating the energy cascade in the inertial range, a range where large and small scales effects can be neglected, to the fluid viscosity and the total energy dissipated by the turbulent flow. We will présent and use the Kolmogorov’s scaling law in a subséquent section.
Seeing how turbulence is affected by a huge range of scales, many researchers tried to simplify the problem of turbulence by reducing the number of degrees of freedom for the System. We mention two attempts, representing two schools of thought. One was done by Werner Heisenberg^ who argued that the motion of small scales affect the motion of large scales the same way molecular motion affects mean motion via viscosity. The assumption of eddy viscosity tries to incorporate ail the small scales physics into an effective term. Another approached was introduced ' Lived: 23 August 1842 - 21 February 1912.
^Lived: 11 October 1881 - 30 September 1953.
^ Lived: 25 April 1903 - 20 October 1987.
■'Lived; 5 December 1901 - 1 February 1976.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 17 by Robert Kraichnan' in form of the Direct Interaction Approximation, by mainly assuming that knowing how the turbulent energy is transferred is sufficient for describing turbulence, allowing to close the set of équations in a mathematical formulation.
Compared to the field of hydrodynamical turbulence, magneto-hydrodynamics is a relative recent field which came into existence with the discovery of magneto- fluid waves [6], known as Alfvén waves by Hannes Olof Gsta Alfvén^. Referred sometimes in old literature as hydro-magnetic turbulence, MHD turbulence has established itself as a field of study on its own. The coupling of Maxwells electro- magnetic équations with the Navier-Stokes hydrodynamic équation, has led to the beginning of understanding of a rich phenomenological problem.
Today, with the advancement of computer algorithms and the increase of their power, the multitude of physical phenomena involved in complex turbulent flows are studied with the help of numerical methods, in the détriment of analytical meth- ods to some extent. Pioneered by S. Orszag for turbulence studies, pseudo-spectral methods represent the best of both worlds as the simplicity and accuracy of the the method allowed for analytical ideas to be tested directly from the évolution of the équations. The pseudo-spectral methods were quickly embraced by people like A.
Pouquet, Y. Zhou, K. Ohkitani, S. Kida, R.S. Rogallo, J.A. Domaradzki, F. Waleffe and many other members of the community, including the présent author who used such methods for the original work presented in the current thesis.
1.4 Empirical laws of turbulence
Similarto other complex physical Systems, experiments can provide answers about the nature of a phenomena despite the fact that mathematical théories can not be properly formulated. Pipe flows, channel flows or wind tunnels represent the most common form of turbulent experiments. Pipe flow experiments rely on the bound- ary generated instabilities to propagate in a laminar flow and represent a good method for studying the transition to turbulence. Channel experiments can be used in a similar way, but also in studying the type of turbulence generated by a sim
ple obstacle which possess varions symmetries or objects with complex, realistic shapes like ships or sea floors. For the génération of homogenous, fully devel- oped turbulence, passing a flow trough a grid in a wind tunnel represents the best approach.
For ail of these experiments, using an anemometer type device, the velocity of the flow can be measured in one point and varions statistics can be then determined.
Typically, the information of at least two points located in the direction of the flow is used to compute the longitudinal velocity incrément,
ôui\{:>c,£) = [u{^ + £), (1.1)
' Lived: 15 January 1928 - 26 February 2008.
^Lived: .50 May 1908-2 April 1995.
CHAPTER I. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 18 For homogenous turbulence, we can drop the dependency of x. Thus, {i) rep- resents the velocity incrément between two points separated by the distance pro- jected onto the line of séparation. Using the longitudinal velocity incrément an entire class of statistical moments can be defined in the form of structure func- tions.
Sp{i) ^ ([<5u||(^)f) . (1.2) The volume average can be replaced experimentally by an ensemble average. The Work consists in relating the Sp{i) fonctions to different experimental conditions and more importantly to the Reynolds number defined as,
U 1 (1.3)
where u is the viscosity of the fluid and U and L are the characteristic velocity and length of the turbulent System chosen either on the flow or on the experimental Setup. Experimentally two empirical laws were determined, namely,
Two-thirds law: In a turbulent flow, at very high Reynolds number, the second order structure function 52(^) behaves approximately as the two-thirds power of the distance £ separating the two-points.
S2{£) ~ . (1.4)
Finite energy dissipation law: For identical experimental circumstances, the en- ergy dissipation per unit mass tends towards a finite positive limit when the viscosity of the fluid is reduced as much as possible.
lim Su > 0 or, more precisely, lim ~ —^7^ ■ (1-5)
v-yO i/—yO £
The last relation can be determined theoretically and it implies that the two-point, third order statistical momentum for turbulence is non-vanishing for ^ > 0. The finite energy dissipation resuit is, to a degree, non-intuitive. Since the dissipation is proportional with the viscosity, one would assume that reducing the viscosity to zéro would reduce the dissipation to zéro as well. In fact, the dissipation is also proportional to the intensity of the nonuniform velocity strain, the shear stresses.
When the viscosity becomes small, these stresses start to become large, a fact that compensate the overall energy dissipation. The finite energy dissipation law ex- plains why a flow in the limit u 0 behaves in a different way compared to an Euler flow for which u = 0.
Considering the équations (1.4) and (1.5), from dimensional arguments, we can now Write a relation for high Reynolds number turbulence,
S2{£) ^ (1.6)
This expression relates the energy contained in a eddy, of size £, to the total energy dissipation rate in the range where viscous effects can be neglected.
CHAPTER /. PHENOMENOLOGY OF TURBULENCE 19
Chapter notes & Acknowledgments
★ This chapter represents my attempt to familiarized the reader with the prob- lem of turbulence, without the use of a mathematical formalism. Although the description is based on my own intuition, the historical dates are obtained from the internet, mainly: www. wikipedia. org . Since the dates accu- racy are not critical for the current work, we allow ourselves the liberty of using an open source encyclopedia.
★ As a first read, for any novice scientist that wants to obtain insight into the filed of turbulence, we recommend the book of U. Frish, Turbulence: The legacy of A. N. Kolmogorov, [48],
Chapter 2
Theory of turbulence
2.1 The évolution équations
Deriving the magnetohydrodynamic équations
The dérivation of the magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) équations can be performed using multiple approaches, based on the framework employed by each person.
However, regardless of the approach used, be it averaging kinetic équations [ 10, 49], constructing a covariant formalism for relativistic MHD (similar to the method employed by [107] and [81] for the hydrodynamic case) or simply obtaining them for a continuum medium [16, 49], the physical results are unique as long as the different frameworks overlap and the assumptions made in each case hold true. In our studies, we consider the évolution équations as being derived for an electrically conductive medium called plasma, in the continuum, fluid limit. This approached represents possibly the oldest but also one of the strongest way of introducing the évolution équations.
Traditionally, the starting point consists in deriving the Navier-Stokes équation, representing the momentum conservation équation for a nonconductive fluid, from the second law of classical mechanics for a continuum media. An équation of State relates the hydrodynamic pressure to the mass density p and température, which are found by solving the density continuity équation and température équation, re- spectively. In our studies, we will employ the incompressibility limit. This approx
imation simplifies our work immensely, as the momentum conservation équation, which reduces to the flow’s velocity évolution, découplés from the température équation for a constant mass density. Since there are a lot of good books present- ing this dérivation [ 13, 90, 71 ] and continuum media mechanics is part of any good university curriculum, we will forgo tradition and just postulate the Navier-Stokes équation. However, we would like to mention that the following MHD dérivation is independent of the incompressibility assumption for the flow.
In the incompressibility limit, the évolution of the velocity u = u(x, t) for a
20
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OE TURBULENCE 21 nonconductive flow is given by the Navier-Stokes équation,
Ou
^ = -U • Vu + i^v'^u -Vp , (2.1)
ot
where v is the kinematic viscosity and p = p{x, t) is the hydrodynamic pres
sure divided by the constant mass density. Due to the incompressibility condition, V • U = 0, the pressure is not an independent variable and dépends on u through its dérivatives. This can be easily seen by taking the divergence of équation (2.1 ) which results in a Poisson équation for the pressure,
= - Vu : Vu . (2.2)
Depending on the complexity of the boundary conditions for the velocity field, obtaining a solution for the pressure reduces now to the insurmountable or trivial task of inverting the Laplacian opérât or, V^.
For an electrically conductive fluid, of electric permittivity e and magnetic per- meability p,, an additional body force acts on the flow, namely the Lorentz force, Îl = crE 4- J X B. This force couples the momentum conservation given by the Navier-Stokes équation to electromagnetism given by Maxwell’s équations.
V-B = 0
^ ^ 5B
V-E = E V X B = /r J -f /xe
dt
—> Zéro divergence law , (2.3)
—> Faraday’s law , (2.4)
Gauss law , (2.5)
Ampère’s law . (2.6)
The first two équations relay consistency informations about the electric E = E(x, f) and magnetic B = B(x, f) fields, while the last two équations in the set dénoté the influences of the sources on the fields, where a = cr(x, t) is the charge density and J = J (x, t) is the electric current. The two sources are related through the continuity équation.
d(7
dt + V-J = 0, (2.7)
which is not an independent relation and can be obtained from the divergence of the Ampère’s law and the Gauss law. The current generated by the évolution in time of the electric field is known as the displacement current and its usually quite small compared to J for the majorities of plasmas.
We make now the most important assumption in the dérivation of the MHD équations. By définition, the plasma medium is considered to be electrically con
ductive but not to hâve free electric charges. This is known as the electro-neutrality ' ' The electro-neutrality property can be seen as the self screening effect of the électrons and ions as
they are not confined to a crystal lattice but mobile in the fluid. The forces enforcing the screening are high frequency and can be considered as instantly opposing any tendency of charge séparation.
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 22
property of a plasma'. Because of this property, the electric currents J are non zero“, even though a is taken to be zéro in the Maxwell’s équations. For this rea- son, the Lorentz force is now properly given for a plasma to be,
fi, = J X B , (2.8)
since ctE = 0. Remembering that the electric permittivity e and magnetic perme- ability ^ are constants related to the speed of light as c = we rewrite the displacement current appearing in the Ampère law, given by équation (2.6), as c~‘^dEi/dt. For a slow moving medium in rapport to c, we can neglect the vari
ons contributions brought by the displacement current. By doing so, extracting the electric current from the reduced form of the équation (2.6),
J = -V X B , (2.9)
E
and introduce it into the Lorentz force expression, we obtain a form of the force depending only on the electromagnetic fields,
f^ = i(VxB)xB. (2.10)
Using the vectorial identity (V x B) x B = (B • V)B — V(B • B)/2, we write the Navier-Stokes équation for a plasma medium to be,
O 1
U • Vu-)-— Vp H—fi,, (2.11)
P
1 IBP
U ■ Vu -I- — Vp H--- B ■ VB — V-^--- . (2.12)
PP 2pp
We see that a new variable has been introduced in form of the magnetic field B(x, f). To account for its évolution in time a new équation has to be solved, namely Faraday’s induction équation (2.4), which tells us that the évolution of the magnetic field is minus the curl of the electric field. Using Ohm’s law for a con- ductive fluid, which consists in assuming that the electric field dépends linearly on the electric current in the fluid co-moving frame of référencé E' = xJ. we obtain in the laboratory frame of reference E' = E -j- u x B an expression for E as,
E = -uxB-fxJ, (2.13)
where x is the electric permeability. Introducing this expression for the electric field in équation (2.4) and using the expression for the electric current obtained ' Remembering that we dénoté generically the medium as plasma, we mention that for a liquid métal
plasma the electro-neutrality property is even stronger then for an ionized gas.
^This can be seen microscopically as (au)^ = J where the (...)d dénotés averaging over the smallest domain for which the electro-neutrality property is true, {a)d = 0.
Ou dt
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OE TURBULENCE 23
from équation (2.9), we obtain the évolution équation for the magnetic field.
qt->
— = V X (u X B) - -V X (V X B) ,
ot /i
= -U • VB + B • Vu + -V^B , M
(2.14) (2.15) where we hâve used the appropriate vectorial identities, Vx(uxB) = u(V-B) — B(V • u) + (B • V)u - (u • V)B and V x (V x B) = V(V • B) - V^B, while keeping count of the zero-divergence nature of the velocity an magnetic fields.
Technically, we hâve derived the set of MHD équation, however we will use the MHD équations in the following form,
= —u ■ Vu + b • Vb + i^V^u — Vp , (2.16)
— = —u • Vb + b • Vu + pV^b , (2.17)
where r/ is the magnetic diffusivity (p = x/m)> the pressure now incorporate the magnetic pressure tenu (~ |Bp) and the magnetic field is expressed in Alfvén velocity units b = B/y^^. In this form the nonlinear tenus influences are casier to investigate. When needed the electric field and electric current are found from the algebraic relation.
e = —u x b + pV X b , (2.18)
j = Vxb. (2.19)
To simplify our analysis even further we consider the magnetic Prandtl number Pr = r//p to be unity by taking u = t] throughout our work.
Elsâsser représentation
Since the MHD équations possess a certain symmetry in u and b, we can rewrite them in tenu of the Elsâsser variables, [41], defined as,
Z* = u ± b . (2.20)
The MHD équations in Elsâsser représentation hâve the form,
dz^ • Vz^ + r'"*'V^z^ + i/“V^z^ — Vp , (2.21)
where = {v ± ^)/2 and the total pressure p can be eliminated due to the divergent free condition, V • z* = 0. The advantage of this form of the MHD équations consists in the non-linear tenu which is responsible only for the cross- coupling of z+ and z“, without any self-coupling phenomena. The two nonlinear tenus can be seen now as the scattering of contra-propagating waves.
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 24 Addressing an inconstancy
We hâve introduced the MHD équation in a non-relativistic limit by coupling a non- relativistic flow, which possesses a Galilean invariance, with the electromagnetic field, which possesses a Lorentz invariance. This introduces an inconsistency in the theory that has to be addressed*.
For a Lorentz boost in an arbitrary direction with velocity V, it is convenient to décomposé the spatial vector x into components perpendicular and parallel to the velocity V, so that for x = xj^ + X|| only the component xy will be affected by the transformation.
= ' (2.22)
X|| = 7(x|| - Vf) , (2.23)
x'i = x_L , (2.24)
where 7 = (1 — V ■ V/c^)“^/^. As presented in [52], the Lorentz transformation for the electric and magnetic fields are expressed^ as,
Ej| = E|| , (2.25)
Ej_ = 7[Ej- + V X B] , (2.26)
and
Bj| = By , (2.27)
B'^ = 7[Bi - Iv X E] . (2.28)
We see that in the classical limit, when c —> 00, the factor 7 tend towards unity. In this situation^ we recover the Galilean transformation of the electric and magnetic fields.
E' = E + V X B , (2.29)
B' = B , (2.30)
' Of course, this problem would not appear if we would use a Lorentz invariant flow, expressed by a four-vector velocity = ■ydx.'^/dt, where = (c t, x).
^The electromagnetic anti-symmetric field-strength tensor, defined in term of E and B as.
0 -E,/c -Ey/C -E,/c'
Fx/c 0 -B, By
Ey/c Bx 0 -Bx
E,/c — By Bx 0
transforms under an arbitrary Lorentz transformation, AO, as F^'' = A0A^F“^. The Lorentz transformations for the electric and magnetic fields are found accordingly, considering that the form of AO can be identified from équations (2.22-2.24) which represent a Lorentz boost x^ = AOx"
for the four-vector, x** = (c t, x).
■’Since from dimensional arguments ||E|| = ||u||||B||, where u is the velocity of the charge generat- ing the magnetic field, the terms proportional with ||V||||u||/c^ can be neglected for ||V|| and ||u||
much smaller then c.
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 25 for a Galilean boost.
f' = f, (2.31)
x' = X - Vf . (2.32)
From a physical point of view, this transformation is valid only for phenomenas that are much slower then the propagation of the electromagnetic waves '. In the classical MHD approximation, the flow induced magnetic field and the consistent electric field are in fact Galilean invariant but do not account anymore for the elec
tromagnetic coupling between E and B, as variations in time of the electric field will not generate magnetic fields any longer.
2.2 Symmetry groups
In physics, symmetries are an important aspect of any phenomena, as they depict constrains in the dynamics that can simplify the development of subséquent théo
ries for the phenomena in question. More precisely, the term symmetry refers to any discrète or continuons invariance group of a dynamical theory. For G, a group of transformations acting on the space-time fonctions u(x, t) and b(x, t), it is said to be a symmetry group of the MHD équations if, for ail u and b which are solution of the MHD équation, the fonctions gu and gh are also solutions, where g E G is an element of the group. By setting b = 0 we recover the symmetries for the Navier-Stokes équation, as listed by [48].
Since the MHD équations are dissipative and not fondamental in any way, some of the symmetries we will list can only be considered when appropriate limits are taken. We will mention these shortcomings when appropriate. Also, for high tur
bulence levels these symmetries will be broken in a point wise sense but they will be recovered in a statistical sense. This implies a constrained on the statistical States allowed rather then on the équation dynamics. For the symmetries to hâve maximal level of validity, the turbulent system should be unbounded, extending to infinity, or at east possess periodic boundary conditions.
Space translations
For any r 6 M^, we define the space translation transformation
t —¥ t — t ^ (2.33)
X —>■ x' = X 4- r , (2.34)
U ^ u' = U , (2.35)
b b' = b . (2.36)
'This is équivalent in our case with placing the displacement current c ^dEjdt to zéro, which results in V^E = 0 and V^B = 0, Le. the instantaneous propagation of an electromagnetic wave.
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 26 which leaves the MHD équations invariant. This signifies that MHD turbulence is continuously homogenous in absence of boundaries for a laminar State. In the presence of boundaries, like for an object immerse in a plasma flow, this symmetry is broken by the onset of turbulence. A weaker symmetry of discrète homogeneity may be recovered for r' of the dimension of the object for an appropriate magnetic boundary condition. For high Reynolds number the discrète homogeneity will be completely lost but the plasma will be homogenous in a statistical sense, as the turbulent structures will be uniformly distributed in space.
Time translations
For any r G M, we define the time translation transformation
t —y t — t -|- T , (2.37)
X —>■ x' = X , (2.38)
U —> u' = U , (2.39)
b ^ b' = b , (2.40)
which leave the MHD équations invariant. This symmetry signifies that the MHD équations are time homogenous or time stationary for a laminar State. In the case of fully developed turbulence, a statistical stationary State can be found if the energy introduced in the System is equal to the energy lost due to dissipative effects.
Galilean transformation
The Galilean transformation is defined as:
t —^ = t ^ (2.41)
X —>■ x^ = X + Vf , (2.42)
U ^ u' = U + V , (2.43)
b ^ b' = b , (2.44)
for any constant velocity V G R^. We see that for a velocity u(x + Vf, f) + V and magnetic field b(x + Vf, f), the partial time dérivative terms are generating an additional term.
^[u(x +Vf,f)] = ^ + V-Vu , (2.45)
|[b(x + VM)l = f+V.Vb, (2.46)
which cancel with the respective terms generated by [u +V] • Vu and [u +V] • Vb in the right hand side of the MHD équation. The Galilean invariance allows us to remove any constant velocity field for the flow and recover isotropy for a turbulent velocity field imbedded in a constant velocity flow.
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 27 Parity transformation
Under parity transformation
t —^ t — f , (2.47)
X —> x' = —X , (2.48)
U -> u' = —U , (2.49)
b ^ b' = -b , (2.50)
ail the terms in the MHD équations change sign, in particular V —> —V. Under a parity transformations the electric current and the fluid vorticity, defined as the curl of the velocity fields, do not change sign. The évolution équations for these quantities are not invariant under a parity transformation.
Time inversion transformation
For idéal MHD, obtained as z/ = r/ = 0, or in a weaker sense in the limit w ^ 0 and r] ^ 0, a time inversion transformation ^‘"''ersion.
= (2.51)
X ^ x' = X , (2.52)
U ^ u' = -U , (2.53)
b b' = -b , (2.54)
leaves the MHD équations invariant. The braking of this symmetry by the dissipa- tive process, shows the irreversibility of the MHD équations évolution.
Rotation transformation
For a rotation operator S G 50 (R^) a rotation transformation
t —^ t — f , (2.55)
X —)• x' = 5x , (2.56)
U ^ u' = 5u , (2.57)
b ^ b' = 5b , (2.58)
will leave the MHD équation invariant. This symmetry is équivalent with the as- sumption of isotropy. As we will see later, a external constant magnetic field will break this symmetry, although a rotation S' G 50(M^) in the plane perpendicular to the direction of the external magnetic field will still be possible as the spherical symmetry will be replace by a cylindrical one.
CHAPTER 2. THEOR Y OF TURB ULENCE 28 Scaling translations
For idéal MHD, obtained as z/ = ?? = 0, or in a weaker sense in the limit > 0 and 77 —> 0, a scaling transformation can be defined :
where A G E+ and h G K. Under the scaling transformation', ail the ternis in the MHD équation will be multiply by a factor, except for the dissipative terms which are multiplied by A*~^. In particular, for the dissipative situation only h = —1 case is permitted. The scaling transformation is related to the similarity principle of turbulence but can also be seen as spécial case of conformai symme-
2.3 Conservation laws
In physics, identifying the System symmetries (e.g. spherical symmetry... ) is the first step, immediately followed by the définition of proper invariance groups {e.g.
... rotation invariance... ). These are important since an invariance leads to con
servation of a physical quantifies (e.g. ... angular momentum) which represents a constrained on the dynamics of the phenomena in question. For Lagrangian Sys
tems, the Noether theorem provides a simple method for identifying the conserved quantities of a System. Unfortunately, the MHD équation, like the Navier-Stokes one, are dissipative. However, in the idéal case^, when the dissipative terms due to viscosity and magnetic diffusivity are put to zéro, we can talk about conservation
‘ We assume here that the magnetic and velocity fields scale in the same way.
^ The conformai transformations, together with the Poincaré group generate the conformai symmetry group. A conformai symmetry in d dimensions is équivalent to an AdS symmetry in d -f 1 dimen
sion. This led to the AdS/CFT correspondence, which maps a fully nonlinear Navier-Stokes type équation in d dimensions to an Einstein type gravity équation in d -f 1 dimensions. This line of work may bring new results in the field of fully non-linear Systems, [14, 15, 47, 53].
■’We should note that working in the idéal MHD case adds an additional problem, [42, 55, 25, 46, 44]. Viscosity and magnetic diffusivity smooth out any irregularities of the fields, enforcing the smoothness of the fields in a natural way. The lack of singularities and discontinuities, permits the usually employed mathematical manipulations such as intégration by parts and dérivation of Products in an Hilbert space. For the idéal limit, the fields smoothness must be considered in the sense of Hôlder continuity, \f{x) — f{y)\ < C\x — y|“, where C and a are nonnegative real constants. If a = 1, then the fonction satisfies a Lipschitz condition which is a smoothness condition stronger than regular continuity and and if a = 0, then the fonction simply is bounded.
For turbulence, from flux scaling arguments, it is expected that a = 1/3. In this situation is more rigorous to Work with field incréments 5/(r) = /(x -t- r) — /(x) in an L’’ space where the p-norm is defined as, ||(5/(r)|| = (|(5/(r)|P)*^P.
X —> x' = Ax ,
U -A u' = A*u , b -> b' = A'*b ,
(2.59) (2.60) (2.61) (2.62)
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 29 laws of global quantities obtained by averaging over the volume V,
{q) =
^ J
q{x)dx . (2.63)These global quantities are known as idéal invariants. We will list the conservation of global quantities for MHD turbulence, but also the conservation laws in the limit of b —> 0 in which we recover the Navier-Stokes équation. We will systematically employ,
(Vg) = 0 , (2.64)
(V • q) = 0 , (2.65)
for a scalar and vectorial fields that tend towards a constant at ±oo or fields that poses periodic boundary conditions.
The conservation laws presented below are for three-dimensional turbulence.
In the two-dimensional case, some of these laws are always true due to geometrical considérations and new relevant conserved quantities appear.
Conservation of energy
The conservation of energy is probably one of the most important aspect of any Sys
tem. For MHD turbulence, we can define the kinetic energy and magnetic energy at each point in space as,
= ^u(x,f) • u(x,f) = ^||u(x,f)|p , (2.66)
= ^b(x,f) -b(x,f) = ^||b(x,f)||^ , (2.67) where we omit the constant mass density, which we consider to be unity in value, in the définition of the energy densities. The évolution équations for the global kinetic energy = (£"(x,f)) and global magnetic energy = {E^{x,t)) can be obtain form équations (2.16-2.17) by contracting them with u and b, accordingly and then taking the volume average,
• u)) = -((u ■ Vu) • u) 4- ((b • Vb) • u) -f j/((V^u) • u) - (Vp • u) , (2.68) i|((b . b)) = -((u • Vb) • b) + ((b • Vu) • b) + r/((V2b) • b) , (2.69) First, we note that the pressure term does not enter in the évolution of the global kinetic energy, ( Vp • u) = ( V • (pu)) = 0. Noting that we can rewrite the fist term in each équation as the average of a divergence,
((u • Vu) • u) = ^(V • [u(u • u)]) = 0 , (2.70)
((u-Vb)-b) = l(V-[b(b-b)])=0, (2.71)
CHAPTER 2. THEORY OF TURBULENCE 30 we rewrite the global energy évolution équations as.
(2.72) (2.73) where represents the global kinetic energy dissipation and
global magnetic energy dissipation.
represents the
Su = r^((V^u) • u) , (2.74)
= î)((V^b) • b) , (2.75)
and
= ((b ■ Vb) ■ u) , (2.76)
r„' = ((b-vu)-b). (2.77)
We see that the global énergies do not conserve themselves independently in the idéal case (i/ = r/ = 0), for which = Et, = 0 . This is due to the transfer terms T^“ and T^, that are responsible for an exchange of energy taking place between the kinetic and the magnetic energy. The two transfers are of the same net value but of different signs, = —T*, a fact seen best by considering their sum,
= ((b • Vb) • u) + ((b • Vu) • b) = (V • [b(u ■ b)]) = 0 . (2.78) This fact implies that the total energy, obtained as the sum of the kinetic and mag
netic components, is an idéal invariant as it is a conserved quantaty in the idéal case,
^{E^ + E‘’) = ~=0. (2.79)
at dt
In general, the global évolution of the total energy equals the total energy dissipa
tion rate e = Si, + Sr,,
dE
dt = e . (2.80)
We see that for dissipative magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, the total energy de- creases monotonically in absence of sources, even though global exchanges in- crease and decrease the kinetic and magnetic components, respectively.
Conservation of cross-helicity
For MHD turbulence, we can define cross-helicity at each point in space as.
t) = u(x, t) ■ b(x, t) , (2.81)