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Intrinsic relationship between synchronisation thresholds and Lyapunov vectors: evidence from large eddy simulations and shell models

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 April 2025

Jian Li
Affiliation:
School of Naval Architecture and Maritime, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan 316022, PR China
Wenwen Si
Affiliation:
School of Naval Architecture and Maritime, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan 316022, PR China
Yi Li*
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7RH, UK
Peng Xu
Affiliation:
School of Naval Architecture and Maritime, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan 316022, PR China
*
Corresponding author: Yi Li, yili@sheffield.ac.uk

Abstract

An important parameter characterising the synchronisation of turbulent flows is the threshold coupling wavenumber. This study investigates the relationship between the threshold coupling wavenumber and the leading Lyapunov vector using large eddy simulations and the SABRA model. Various subgrid-scale stress models, Reynolds numbers and different coupling methods are examined. A new scaling relation is identified for the leading Lyapunov exponents in large eddy simulations, showing that they approximate those of filtered direct numerical simulations. This interpretation provides a physical basis for results related to the Lyapunov exponents of large eddy simulations, including those related to synchronisation. Synchronisation experiments show that the peak wavenumber of the energy spectrum of the leading Lyapunov vector coincides with the threshold coupling wavenumber, in large eddy simulations of box turbulence with standard Smagorinsky or dynamic mixed models as well as in the SABRA model, replicating results from direct numerical simulations of box turbulence. Although the dynamic Smagorinsky model exhibits different behaviour, the totality of the results suggests that the relationship is an intrinsic property of a certain class of chaotic systems. We also confirm that conditional Lyapunov exponents characterise the synchronisation process in indirectly coupled systems as they do in directly coupled ones, with their values insensitive to the nature of the master flow. These findings advance the understanding of the role of the Lyapunov vector in the synchronisation of turbulence.

Information

Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Set-up of the three-body experiments and the twin experiments showing differing coupling mechanisms. The master in the former is a DNS in Group I and an LES in Group II. It may have a different number of slave modes from the slave systems, and its slave modes do not converge to those in the slave systems $A$ and $B$.

Figure 1

Table 1. Parameters for low-Reynolds-number LESs in Group I.

Figure 2

Table 2. Parameters for the high-Reynolds-number LESs in Group II.

Figure 3

Table 3. Parameters for the DNSs corresponding to the LESs in Group I.

Figure 4

Table 4. Parameters for the SABRA model.

Figure 5

Figure 2. Energy spectra: (a) for cases in R3; (b) for cases in R5. Dash-dotted lines without symbols, the $k^{-5/3}$ power law; the dashed line without symbol, DNS for R3.

Figure 6

Figure 3. Normalised unconditional LLEs $\lambda \tau _k$ as functions of $\eta /\Delta$ for the cases in (a) Group I and (b) Group II. The horizontal dash-dotted line indicates $\lambda \tau _k = 0.12$ corresponding to the value for DNS with moderate Reynolds number (Boffetta & Musacchio 2017; Berera & Ho 2018; Inubushi et al.2023).

Figure 7

Figure 4. Normalised unconditional LLE $\lambda \tau _\Delta$ as functions of $\eta /\Delta$ for cases in subgroups R4 and R5. Symbols, simulations results; lines, least-squares fitting based on (4.4).

Figure 8

Table 5. Coefficients for the fitting function of the data in figure 4 (cf. (4.4)).

Figure 9

Figure 5. Normalised conditional LLEs $\lambda \tau _\Delta$ as functions of $k_m \Delta _t$: (a) R1; (b) R3; (c) R4; (d) R5.

Figure 10

Figure 6. Threshold wavenumber $k_c \Delta _t$ for all subgroups R1–R5.

Figure 11

Figure 7. (a) The threshold wavenumber $k_c \eta$ for all subgroups R1–R5. (b) $\Delta _t/ \Delta$. The slope of the dashed line is $1$.

Figure 12

Figure 8. Average energy spectra of the unconditional LLV from the DNS data in subgroups R1, R2 and R3. The spectra are normalised so that the total energy is unity. The vertical line marks the value $k\eta = 0.2$.

Figure 13

Figure 9. Energy spectrum $E_\Delta (k)$ for LES with (a,b) SSM, (c,d) DSM and (e,f) DMM. Results for lower Reynolds numbers are shown in panels (a,c,e) whereas results for higher Reynolds numbers are shown in panels (b,d,f).

Figure 14

Figure 10. Comparison between the threshold coupling wavenumber $k_c$ and the peak wavenumber $k_p$ of the LLV: (a) data from cases in R1, R2 and R3 (lower Reynolds numbers); (b) data from cases in R4 and R5 (high Reynolds numbers), and for SSM and DMM only.

Figure 15

Figure 11. (a) The (normalised) energy spectrum $E(k_n)$. (b) The (normalised) energy flux $\Pi (k_n)$. (c) Synchronisation error ${\mathcal E}_{AB }(t)$ for case $Re_0$, with coupling wavenumber $k_m = k_7$, $k_8$, $k_9$ and $k_{10}$.

Figure 16

Figure 12. (a) Normalised conditional LLE $\lambda (k_m)$ for the SABRA model. (b) Spectra $E_\Delta (k_n)$ for the LLV.

Figure 17

Figure 13. Threshold coupling wavenumber $k_c$ obtained from the conditional LLEs $\lambda (k_m )$ versus the peak wavenumber $k_p$ of the energy spectrum of the LLV $E_\Delta (k_n)$.

Figure 18

Figure 14. Comparison between the decay rates of the synchronisation error ${\mathcal E}_{AB}(t)$ and the conditional LLEs of the slave flow.

Figure 19

Figure 15. Threshold wavenumber $k_c \Delta _t$. Dashed lines with empty symbols, three-body experiments; solid lines with solid symbols, twin experiments (same as those in figure 6). (a) Low-Reynolds-number cases (R1, R2 and R3). (b) High-Reynolds-number cases (R4 and R5).