Orientation patterns of non-spherical particles in turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

In experiments and numerical simulations we measured angles between the orientations of small spheroids in turbulence. Since turbulent strains tend to align nearby spheroids, one might think that their relative angles are quite small. We show that this intuition fails in general: the distribution of relative angles has heavy power-law tails, and the dynamics evolves to a fractal attractor despite the fact that the fluid velocity is spatially smooth at small scales. The fractal geometry depends on particle shape, and it determines the power-law exponents. This talk is based on: Zhao, Gustavsson, Ni, Kramel, Voth, Andersson & Mehlig, arxiv:1707.06037




*Vetenskapsrådet (2013-3992), Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (2014.0048), Research Council of Norway (250744/F20 and NN2649K), NSF (DMR-1508575

Presenters

  • Bernhard Mehlig

    • University of Gothenburg

Authors

  • Bernhard Mehlig

    • University of Gothenburg
  • Lihao Zhao

    • Tsinghua University
  • Kristian Gustafsson

    • University of Gothenburg
  • Rui Ni

    • Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins University
    • Pennsylvania State Univ
    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Stefan Kramel

    • Wesleyan
  • Greg Voth

    • Wesleyan Univ
    • Wesleyan University
    • Wesleyan
  • Helge I. Andersson

    • NTNU