English

Velocity difference statistics in turbulence

Soft Condensed Matter 2009-11-11 v2

Abstract

We unify two approaches that have been taken to explain the non-Gaussian probability distribution functions (PDFs) obtained in measurements of longitudinal velocity differences in turbulence, and we apply our approach to Couette-Taylor turbulence data. The first approach we consider was developed by Castaing and coworkers, who obtained the non-Gaussian velocity difference PDF from a superposition of Gaussian distributions for subsystems that have a particular energy dissipation rate at a fixed length scale [Castaing et al., {\it Physica D} {\bf 46}, 177 (1990)]. Another approach was proposed by Beck and Cohen, who showed that the observed PDFs can be obtained from a superposition of Gaussian velocity difference PDFs in subsystems conditioned on the value of an intensive variable (inverse ``effective temperature'') in each subsystem [Beck and Cohen, {\it Physica A} {\bf 322}, 267 (2003)]. The intensive variable was defined for subsystems assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium, but no method was proposed for determining the size of a subsystem. We show that the Castaing and Beck-Cohen methods are related, and we present a way to determine subsystem size in the Beck-Cohen method. The application of our approach to Couette-Taylor turbulence (Reynolds number 540 000540~000) yields a log-normal distribution of the intensive parameter, and the resultant velocity difference PDF agrees well the observed non-Gaussian velocity difference PDFs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0502301,
  title  = {Velocity difference statistics in turbulence},
  author = {Sunghwan Jung and Harry L. Swinney},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0502301},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

8 pages, 7 figures