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Discrete effects in Wave Turbulence

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Discrete effects in Wave Turbulence Sergey Nazarenko (Warwick) Collaborators: Yeontaek Choi, Colm Connaughton, Petr Denissenko, Uriel Frisch, Sergei Lukaschuk, Yuri ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Discrete effects in Wave Turbulence


1
Discrete effects in Wave Turbulence
  • Sergey Nazarenko (Warwick)
  • Collaborators Yeontaek Choi, Colm Connaughton,
    Petr Denissenko, Uriel Frisch, Sergei Lukaschuk,
    Yuri and Victor Lvov, Elena Kartashova, Dhuba
    Mitra, Boris Pokorni, Andrei Pushkarev, Vladimir
    Zakharov.

2
What is Wave Turbulence?
  • WT describes a stochastic field of weakly
    interacting dispersive waves.

3
Other Examples of Wave Turbulence
  • Sound waves,
  • Plasma waves,
  • Waves in Bose-Einstein condensates,
  • Kelvin waves on quantised vortex filaments,
  • Interstellar turbulence solar wind,
  • Waves in Semi-conductor Lasers,
  • Spin waves.

4
How can we describe WT?
  • Deterministic equations for the wave field.
  • Weak nonlinearity expansion.
  • Statistical averaging.
  • Large-box limit.
  • Long-time limit.

5
The order of the limits is essential
  • Nonlinear resonance broadening must be much wider
    than the spacing of the discrete (because of the
    finite box) Fourier modes.

6
Drift waves in plasma and Rossby waves in GFD
Charney-Hasegawa-Mima equation
  • ? -- electrostatic potential
    (stream-function)
  • ? -- ion Larmor radius (by Te) (Rossby radius)
  • ß -- drift velocity (Rossby
    velocity)
  • x -- poloidal arc-length (east-west)
  • y -- radial length
    (south-north)

7
Weakly nonlinear drift waves with random phases?
wave kinetic equation (Longuet-Higgens Gill,
1967)
Resonant three-wave interactions
8
Characteristic evolution times
  • Deterministic T1/?,
  • Stochastic T1/?2 due to cancellations of
    contributions of random-phased waves.
  • What happens if the box is finite and the
    resonance broadening is of the order or smaller
    than the spacing of discrete k-modes?

9
3 possibilities
  • Exact frequency resonances are absent in for
    discrete k on the grid e.g. capillary waves
    (Kartashova 91).
  • Some (usually small) number of resonances
    survives e.g. deep water surface waves
    (Kartashova 94,07, Lvov et al 05).
  • All resonances survive e.g. Alfven waves
    (Nazarenko 07)

10
Capillary waves (Connaughton et al 2001)
  • Quasi-resonant interactions.
  • d depends on the wave intensities.
  • Exists dcrit for solutions to appear.

11
Turbulent cascades
  • Start with a set of modes at small ks.
  • Find quasi-resonances and add the new modes to
    the original set.
  • Continue like this to build further cascade
    steps.

12
Cascade stages
13
Critical intensity for initiating the cascade to
infinite ks.
  • Cascade dies out in a finite number of steps if
    dlt 2nd crit value, and it continues to infinite k
    otherwise.

14
Deep water gravity waves (Choi et al 2004,
Korotkevich et al 2005)
  • Surviving resonances cause k-space intemittency
  • Low k modes are more intermittent discrete
    effects.
  • Theory in Choi et al predicts power-law PDF
    tails.

15
Only one critical d once started the cascade
proceeds to infinity
16
Evolving turbulence VERY weak field (Rossby-
Kartashova et al 89, water - Craig 90s, Alfven
Nazarenko06)
  • Only modes which are in exact resonance are
    active
  • Sometimes sets of resonant modes are finite no
    cascade to high k, deterministic recursive
    (periodic or chaotic) dynamics e.g. Rossby
    (Kartashova Lvov 07).
  • Sometimes resonant triads (or quartets) form
    chains leading to infinite ks e.g. Alfven or
    NLS cascades possible poorly studied.
  • But
  • Most interesting question is how
    discrete/deterministic evolution at low k gets
    transformed into continuous/random process at
    high k. Mesoscopic turbulence. Some ideas
    suggested but a lot of work remains to be done.

17
Mesoscopic turbulence sandpile model (Nazarenko
05)
  • Put weak forcing at low ks.
  • Originally, the wave intensity is weak
  • -gt no quasi-resonances
  • -gt accumulation of wave energy at low k until d
    reaches the critical value
  • -gt initiation of cascade as an avalanche spill
    toward larger k.
  • -gt value of d drops to its critical value
  • -gt repeat the process

18
Weak forcing -gt critical spectrum
  • d dcrit -gtsandpile - E(?) ?-6.
  • For reference
  • Phillips spectrum E(?) ?-5
  • Zakharov-Filonenko - E(?) ?-4.
  • Kuznetsov (modified Phillips) - E(?) ?-4.

19
Wave-tank experiments(Denissenko et al 06,
Falcon et al 06).
  • Paris setup -gt 4cm to 1cm gravity range
    capillary range
  • Hull setup -gt 1m to 1cm of gravity-wave range.

20
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21
Spectra
  • Non-universality Steeper spectra for low
    intensities

22
Exponents
  • Agreement with the critical spectrum at low
    intensity.
  • Phillips and Kuznetsov spectra at higher
    intensities (but not ZF)
  • Forcing-independent intensity avalanches?

23
Cascade sandpiles in numerics (Choi et al 05)
  • Flux(t) at two different ks.

24
Alfven wave turbulence
  • Weak weak dynamics of only modes who are in
    exact resonances -gt enslaving to the 2D component
    (Nazarenko 06).
  • Strong weak classical WT (Galtier et al 2000).
  • Intermediate weak two component system?
    Avalanches?

25
Summary
  • Discreteness causes selective dynamics of k-modes
  • -gt intermittency
  • -gt anisotropic avalanches
  • -gt need better theory, numerics and experiment
    for mesoscopic wave systems
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