Author:
DANAILA L.,ANSELMET F.,ZHOU T.,ANTONIA R. A.
Abstract
In most real or numerically simulated turbulent flows, the energy dissipated at small
scales is equal to that injected at very large scales, which are anisotropic. Despite this
injection-scale anisotropy, one generally expects the inertial-range scales to be locally
isotropic. For moderate Reynolds numbers, the isotropic relations between second-order and third-order moments for temperature (Yaglom's equation) or velocity
increments (Kolmogorov's equation) are not respected, reflecting a non-negligible
correlation between the scales responsible for the injection, the transfer and the
dissipation of energy. In order to shed some light on the influence of the large
scales on inertial-range properties, a generalization of Yaglom's equation is deduced
and tested, in heated grid turbulence (Rλ=66). In this case, the main phenomenon
responsible for the non-universal inertial-range behaviour is the non-stationarity of
the second-order moments, acting as a negative production term.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
111 articles.
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