Turbulent windprint on a liquid surface

ORAL

Abstract

When a turbulent wind blows on a liquid surface it generates surface waves that are amplified above a critical speed. Below the threshold, the wind is still turbulent and generate little surface perturbation called wrinkles. These deformations can be seen as a base state of the liquid surface response, on top of which surface waves may grow. We will present an unified theory of the wrinkle regime as the viscous response of a liquid to a turbulent wind. We will combine analytical computations, DNS model of a turbulent boundary layer and comparison with existing experimental data to provide a quantitative description of such a turbulent windprint on a liquid surface.

*The authors thanks the Labex LASIPS for financial support

Presenters

  • Stephane Perrard

    • Ecole Polytechnique, University Paris-Sud

Authors

  • Stephane Perrard

    • Ecole Polytechnique, University Paris-Sud
  • Adrian Lozano-Duran

    • Stanford University
  • Marc Rabaud

    • University Paris-Sud
  • Michael Benzaquen

    • Ecole Polytechnique
  • Frédéric Moisy

    • Laboratoire FAST, CNRS, Université Paris-Sud, Université Paris-Saclay
    • University Paris-Sud