English

Two-dimensional turbulent condensates without bottom drag

Fluid Dynamics 2025-04-07 v1 Statistical Mechanics Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics

Abstract

The extent to which statistical equilibrium theory is applicable to driven dissipative dynamics remains an important open question in many systems. We use extensive direct numerical simulations of the incompressible two-dimensional (2D) Navier-Stokes equation to examine the steady state of large-scale condensates in 2D turbulence at finite Reynolds number ReRe in the absence of bottom drag. Large-scale condensates appear above a critical Reynolds number Rec4.19Re_c\approx 4.19. Close to this onset, we find a power-law scaling of the energy with ReRecRe-Re_c, with the energy spectrum at large scales following the absolute equilibrium form proposed by Kraichnan. At larger ReRe, the energy spectrum deviates from this form, displaying a steep power-law range at low wave numbers with exponent 5-5, with most of the energy dissipation occurring within the condensate at large scales. We show that this spectral exponent is consistent with the logarithmic radial vorticity profile of the condensate vortices predicted by quasi-linear theory for a viscously saturated condensate. Our findings shed new light on the classical problem of large-scale turbulent condensation in forced dissipative 2D flows in finite domains, showing that the large scales are close to equilibrium dynamics in weakly turbulent flows but not in the strong condensate regime with Re1Re\gg1.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2504.02978,
  title  = {Two-dimensional turbulent condensates without bottom drag},
  author = {Adrian van Kan and Alexandros Alexakis and Edgar Knobloch},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.02978},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T22:45:55.726Z