Laminar-turbulent transition in pipes with body forces: continuous, discontinuous or both?

ORAL

Abstract

The laminar-turbulent transition in straight pipes is believed to occur through a continuous non-equilibrium phase transition in the directed percolation universality class. However, in curved pipes or in the presence of body forces it is possible to observe a discontinuous transition and other phenomenology which seem inconsistent with the emerging consensus. Here, we consider the perturbing effects of body forces and incorporate them into a minimal Landau theory of the transition. We calculate the phase diagram as a function of Reynolds number and body force strength, and show that above a threshold strength of the latter, there is a tricritical point which accounts for the observed discontinuity behavior, including spatially heterogeneous states. Our results are consistent with recent experiments in centrifugal pipes and direct numerical simulations of heated flows.

*This work was partially supported by the Simons Foundation through Targeted Grant "Revisiting the Turbulence Problem Using Statistical Mechanics" (Grant No. 662985(N.G.)).

Presenters

  • Guru K Jayasingh

    • University of California, San Diego

Authors

  • Guru K Jayasingh

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Nigel Goldenfeld

    • University of California, San Diego