Direct control of the small-scale energy balance in two-dimensional fluid dynamics

Publication date

2015-11-10

Authors

Frank, JasonISNI 0000000041777685
Leimkuhler, Benedict
Myerscough, Keith W.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We explore the direct modification of the pseudo-spectral truncation of two-dimensional, incompressible fluid dynamics to maintain a prescribed kinetic energy spectrum. The method provides a means of simulating fluid states with defined spectral properties, for the purpose of matching simulation statistics to given information, arising from observations, theoretical prediction or high-fidelity simulation. In the scheme outlined here, Nosé-Hoover thermostats, commonly used in molecular dynamics, are introduced as feedback controls applied to energy shells of the Fourier-discretized Navier-Stokes equations. As we demonstrate in numerical experiments, the dynamical properties (quantified using autocorrelation functions) are only modestly perturbed by our device, while ensemble dispersion is significantly enhanced compared with simulations of a corresponding truncation incorporating hyperviscosity.

Keywords

Atmospheric flows, computational methods, homogeneous turbulence, Taverne, Mechanical Engineering, Mechanics of Materials, Condensed Matter Physics

Citation

Frank, J, Leimkuhler, B & Myerscough, K W 2015, 'Direct control of the small-scale energy balance in two-dimensional fluid dynamics', Journal of Fluid Mechanics, vol. 782, pp. 240-259. https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2015.526