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On the violation of the zeroth law of turbulence in space plasmas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2021

R. Meyrand*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Otago, 730 Cumberland St., Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
J. Squire
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Otago, 730 Cumberland St., Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
A.A. Schekochihin
Affiliation:
The Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford, Clarendon Laboratory, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PU, UK Merton College, Merton Street, Oxford OX1 4JD, UK
W. Dorland
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
*
Email address for correspondence: romain.meyrand@otago.ac.nz
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Abstract

The zeroth law of turbulence states that, for fixed energy input into large-scale motions, the statistical steady state of a turbulent system is independent of microphysical dissipation properties. This behaviour, which is fundamental to nearly all fluid-like systems from industrial processes to galaxies, occurs because nonlinear processes generate smaller and smaller scales in the flow, until the dissipation – no matter how small – can thermalise the energy input. Using direct numerical simulations and theoretical arguments, we show that in strongly magnetised plasma turbulence such as that recently observed by the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft, the zeroth law is routinely violated. Namely, when such turbulence is ‘imbalanced’ – when the large-scale energy input is dominated by Alfvénic perturbations propagating in one direction (the most common situation in space plasmas) – nonlinear conservation laws imply the existence of a ‘barrier’ at scales near the ion gyroradius. This causes energy to build up over time at large scales. The resulting magnetic-energy spectra bear a strong resemblance to those observed in situ, exhibiting a sharp, steep kinetic transition range above and around the ion-Larmor scale, with flattening at yet smaller scales. The effect thus offers a possible solution to the decade-long puzzle of the position and variability of ion-kinetic spectral breaks in plasma turbulence. The existence of the ‘barrier’ also suggests that, how a plasma is forced at large scales (the imbalance) may have a crucial influence on thermodynamic properties such as the ion-to-electron heating ratio.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. The spatial structure of the perpendicular electron flow $\boldsymbol {u}_{\perp }$, or equivalently, the perpendicular electric field $\boldsymbol {E}_{\perp }=-\boldsymbol {\nabla }_{\perp }\varphi$ (see (2.2) to (2.3)). We compare imbalanced and balanced turbulence in panels (a,c) and panels (b,d), respectively. Panels (a,b) show a parallel $(x,z)$ slice ($\boldsymbol {B}_0=B_{0}\hat {\boldsymbol {z}}$ left to right), panels (c,d) show a perpendicular $(x,y)$ slice ($\boldsymbol {B}_0$ out of the page). The dramatic dependence on imbalance arises because imbalanced turbulence is afflicted by the ‘helicity barrier’: at a non-universal scale $k_{\perp }^{*}\rho _i\lesssim 1$ most of the energy cascade of the dominant component ($E^+$) cannot proceed to smaller scales, violating the zeroth law of turbulence. The resulting sharp break in the spectrum is shown in figure 2, and is followed by the re-emergence of a cascade at yet smaller scales (see zoomed region panel (c)). These simulations have a resolution of $2048^3$ and are initialised by refining the $256^3$ simulations of figures 4–6, starting at $t\approx 18\tau _A$.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Energy spectra for the simulations pictured in figure 1. Purple and orange lines show imbalanced and balanced turbulence, respectively, while solid and dashed lines show the dominant ($E^+$) and subdominant ($E^-$) energies, respectively (see (2.7)). Thin lines show the spectra of the $256^3$ imbalanced simulation at the same time and parameters (see figure 5), emphasising the re-emergence of a KAW cascade (${\sim }k^{-2.8}$) at small scales in imbalanced turbulence, if a sufficient range of scales is available. The resulting double-kinked spectrum strongly resembles those observed in the solar wind (Sahraoui et al.2009; Bowen et al.2020a). As far as we know, this is the first time such spectra have been reproduced in a numerical simulation.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Panel (a) illustrates the violation of the zeroth law of turbulence with respect to the perpendicular dissipation. Each point shows $\varepsilon ^\textrm {diss}_{\perp }/\varepsilon$ in the saturated state of an FLR-MHD simulation with a different value of $\nu _{6\perp }$. The simulations all have $\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0.88$, $\rho _{i}=0.02L_{\perp }$, $256\leqslant N_{\perp }\leqslant 512$, $N_{z}=256$, and are initialised from the saturated state of the simulation marked by the purple star and run until they reach steady state. The vertical dashed line shows the critical $\nu _{6\perp }$ at which the RMHD dissipation scale lies above the scale of the helicity barrier (see text), so that simulations with $1/\nu _{6\perp }<1/\nu _{6\perp }^\textrm {crit}$ are ignorant of FLR effects (the turbulence is dissipated at larger scales), while those with $1/\nu _{6\perp }>1/\nu _{6\perp }^\textrm {crit}$ are not. We see that the helicity barrier halts the perpendicular dissipation causing $\varepsilon ^\textrm {diss}_{\perp }\ll \varepsilon$ at small $\nu _{6\perp }$. In panel (b), coloured points show the saturation energy $E_\textrm {sat}$ versus parallel hyperdissipation $\nu _{6z}$ for five FLR-MHD simulations with $N_\perp =64$, $N_z\leqslant 256$, $\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0.88$ and $\rho _i=0.1L_{\perp }$. Equivalent RMHD simulations ($\rho _i=0$) are shown with black points. The dependence of $E_\textrm {sat}$ on $\nu _{6z}$ at fixed $\varepsilon$ demonstrates that the helicity barrier causes the violation of the zeroth law of turbulence with respect to the parallel dissipation. The inset shows the time evolution of the energy in each case (colours match those of the points).

Figure 3

Figure 4. Energy and dissipation properties from a set of simulations at resolution $N_\perp =N_z=256$. Panel (a) compares the time evolution of energy in imbalanced FLR-MHD ($\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0.88$, $\rho _i=0.02L$) with balanced FLR-MHD ($\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0$, $\rho _i=0.02L$) and imbalanced RMHD ($\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0.88$, $\rho _i=0$). The stars indicate the time from which the higher-resolution simulations of figures 1–2 were initialised. Panel (b) shows $\varepsilon ^\textrm {diss}_{\perp }$ (solid lines) and $\varepsilon ^\textrm {diss}_{z}$ (dotted lines) for each case, to show that saturation is reached through parallel dissipation (unlike in balanced turbulence and in imbalanced RMHD). Panel (c) shows the ($k_{\perp },k_{z}$) dissipation spectrum in the saturated state of imbalanced FLR-MHD, illustrating that dissipation occurs primarily at the perpendicular break scale ($k_{\perp }^{*}\rho _{i}\simeq 0.15$) at high $k_{z}$.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Time evolution of the spectra, $E^\pm (k_\perp )$, for the simulations shown in figure 4, comparing imbalanced FLR-MHD (a), balanced FLR-MHD (b) and imbalanced RMHD (c). Individual spectra are shown at times spaced by $t=0.1\tau _A$, as indicated by the colour. While the spectrum converges rapidly in balanced FLR-MHD and imbalanced RMHD turbulence, the spectra of imbalanced FLR-MHD turbulence continue to evolve until $t\simeq 200\tau _{A}$, with the break continuously moving to larger scales.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Time evolution of the normalised energy flux $\varPi (k_{\perp })/\varepsilon$ for the simulations of figures 4–5, comparing imbalanced FLR-MHD (top panel) and balanced FLR-MHD (bottom panel). The colouring is the same as in figure 5. While balanced FLR-MHD turbulence shows the expected near-constant flux to small scales (where it is dissipated), imbalanced FLR-MHD turbulence is characterised by wild fluctuations in $\varPi$ (note different ordinate scale and the position of the grey line at $\varPi =\varepsilon$), which, with time, are increasingly confined to large scales. The time-dependent wavenumber of the break ($k_{\perp }^{*}$) is shown with the coloured vertical lines. We also show, with $k_{\nu _\perp }$, the scale at which $\varPi$ is equal to the perpendicular dissipation flux (brown lines) in each simulation. The small flux $\varPi \ll \varepsilon$ at smaller scales provides direct evidence for the existence of the helicity barrier.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Position of the break $k_{\perp }^{*}\rho _{i}$ versus the energy imbalance ($1-\sigma _{c}$) for a number of $N_{\perp }=N_{z}=256$ simulations with different injection imbalances $\sigma _{\varepsilon }$. As $\sigma _{c}(t)$ grows in time due to the helicity barrier, there is concurrent decrease in $k_{\perp }^{*}$, with no obvious dependence on the helicity injection $\sigma _{\varepsilon }=\varepsilon _{\mathcal {H}}/\varepsilon$ or other time dependence. The black line shows the empirical fit (3.2), the star shows the fit for figure 2, and the greyed out region indicates where $k_{\perp }^{*}$ gets within a factor of 2 of the forcing scale ($k_{\perp }^{*}< 4\times 2{\rm \pi} /L$). The inset shows a histogram of the fitted spectral slope ${\sim }k_{\perp }^{-\alpha }$ above and below the break for the $\sigma _{\varepsilon }=0.88$ simulation of figure 5 (the averages are $\langle \alpha \rangle \approx 1.67$ above the break and $\langle \alpha \rangle \approx 3.8$ below the break).