4.8 Article

The area rule for circulation in three-dimensional turbulence

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2114679118

Keywords

isotropic turbulence; direct numerical simulation; velocity circulation

Funding

  1. NSF [ACI-1640771]

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The study examines the circulation statistics around minimal area loops and finds that they only match those of planar loops circumscribing equivalent areas when normalized by an internal variable such as the standard deviation. This work highlights the previously unknown connection between minimal surfaces and turbulence.
An important idea underlying a plausible dynamical theory of circulation in three-dimensional turbulence is the so-called area rule, according to which the probability density function (PDF) of the circulation around closed loops depends only on the minimal area of the loop, not its shape. We assess the robustness of the area rule, for both planar and nonplanar loops, using high-resolution data from direct numerical simulations. For planar loops, the circulation moments for rectangular shapes match those for the square with only small differences, these differences being larger when the aspect ratio is farther from unity and when the moment order increases. The differences do not exceed about 5% for any condition examined here. The aspect ratio dependence observed for the second-order moment is indistinguishable from results for the Gaussian random field (GRF) with the same two-point correlation function (for which the results are order-independent by construction). When normalized by the SD of the PDF, the aspect ratio dependence is even smaller (< 2%) but does not vanish unlike for the GRF. We obtain circulation statistics around minimal area loops in three dimensions and compare them to those of a planar loop circumscribing equivalent areas, and we find that circulation statistics match in the two cases only when normalized by an internal variable such as the SD. This work highlights the hitherto unknown connection between minimal surfaces and turbulence.

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