4.7 Article

Recursive one-way Navier-Stokes equations with PSE-like cost

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS
Volume 473, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcp.2022.111744

Keywords

Hydrodynamic stability; Spatial marching; One-way equations; Linearized Navier-Stokes equations

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Spatial marching methods can generate low-cost models of flows with slowly varying direction. In this paper, we introduce a new variant of one-way Navier-Stokes equations that has a cost similar to parabolized stability equations while capturing contributions of all downstream-traveling modes.
Spatial marching methods, in which the flow state is spatially evolved in the downstream direction, can be used to produce low-cost models of flows containing a slowly varying direction, such as mixing layers, jets, and boundary layers. The parabolized stability equations (PSE) are popular due to their extremely low cost but can only capture a single instability mode; all other modes are damped or distorted by regularization methods required to stabilize the spatial march, precluding PSE from properly capturing non -modal behavior, acoustics, and interactions between multiple instability mechanisms. The one-way Navier-Stokes (OWNS) equations properly retain all downstream-traveling modes at a cost that is a fraction of that of global methods but still one to two orders of magnitude higher than PSE. In this paper, we introduce a new variant of OWNS whose cost, both in terms of CPU time and memory requirements, approaches that of PSE while still properly capturing the contributions of all downstream-traveling modes. The method is formulated in terms of a projection operator that eliminates upstream-traveling modes. Unlike previous OWNS variants, the action of this operator on a vector can be efficiently approximated using a series of equations that can be solved recursively, i.e., successively one after the next, rather than as a coupled set. In addition to highlighting the improved cost scaling of our method, we derive explicit error expressions and elucidate the relationship with previous OWNS variants. The properties, efficiency, and accuracy of our method are demonstrated for both free-shear and wall-bounded flows.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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