Noise-Induced Transitions in Anisotropic Two-Dimensional Turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) turbulence features an inverse energy cascade that produces large-scale flow structures such as hurricane-like large-scale vortices (LSVs) and jets. We investigate the dynamics of such large-scale structures using extensive direct numerical simulations of stochastically forced 2D turbulence in a periodic rectangular domain. LSVs form in the system when the aspect ratio δ≈1 and unidirectional jets arise at δ≳1.1. At intermediate δ, noise-induced transitions occur between LSVs and jets. We collect detailed statistics on the lifetimes of these structures, revealing an approximately exponential dependence of the mean lifetime on δ. We also analyze how the lifetimes are impacted by varying the Reynolds number and the scale separation between forcing scale and domain size. The system is found to traverse the same path in Fourier space when transitioning from LSVs to jets and vice versa. In highly elongated domains (δ≫1), an array of jets forms, where the number of jets tends to increase with δ, albeit irregularly. Noise-induced transitions also occur between different numbers of jets. The profiles of the jets in this system are sinusoidal, in contrast with jets on the beta plane. Our findings shed new light on the dynamics of LSVs and jets in anisotropic turbulence.

*L. X. was supported by the Pi2 summer research program and BPURS in the UC Berkeley Physics Department. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Grants DMS-2009563, DMS-2308337, and OCE-2023541) and by the German Research Foundation (DFG Projektnummer: 522026592). The simulations described here were performed on the Savio computational cluster resource provided by the Berkeley Research Computing program at the University of California, Berkeley (supported by the UC Berkeley Chancellor, Vice Chancellor for Research, and Chief Information Officer). This project was also supported by the NSF ACCESS program (project number: PHY230056), allowing us to utilize the Advanced Research Computing at Hopkins (ARCH) core facility (rockfish.jhu.edu), which is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant number OAC 1920103.

Presenters

  • Lichuan Xu

    • Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley

Authors

  • Lichuan Xu

    • Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley
  • Adrian van Kan

    • UC Berkeley
  • Chang Liu

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Edgar Knobloch

    • University of California, Berkeley