====== Movies of plane Couette flow ======
These movies are designed to convey the main ideas of my research in plane Couette flow.
For more details, please see [[http://cns.physics.gatech.edu/~gibson/publications/index.html|my papers]].
===== Visualization scheme =====
The movies show plane Couette flow in a rectangular box of size [Lx, Ly, Lz] with solid walls on the top and
bottom (y = -Ly/2 and Ly/2). The top wall and the upper half of the fluid are cut away to show what happens
at the midplane y=0. The walls slide at constant speeds in opposite directions along x,
the top wall slides towards the back of the box, the bottom towards the front.
Arrows indicate in-plane velocity. The **color indicates the streamwise velocity**, that is, the speed of the fluid in the direction of the wall motion:
* Red indicates fluid moving in the positive streamwise direction (away from the viewer)
* Blue indicates fluid moving in the negative streamwise direction (towards the viewer)
The x,y,z directions are streamwise, wall-normal, and spanwise. The rectangular cell is periodic in x and z, so that the front and back slices match, and the left and the right.
====== Coherent structures in shear flows ======
file=/movies/tutorial/bigbox.flv&image=/movies/tutorial/bigbox.png&repeat=none
This movie show the formation of `coherent structures' in plane Couette flow, with fairly large
aspect-ratio cell: [Lx,Ly,Lz] = [16, 2, 16]. The initial condition is a random perturbation of
laminar flow that meets boundary and divergence-free conditions, has roughly the spectral
characteristics of turbulent fields, and is about 10% in magnitude of the laminar flow (or 1%
in energy).
Observe
* 0 < t < 10 : the random perturbations grow and no apparent order
* 10 < t < 100 : there is little discernable order
* 100 < t < 200 : the flow organizes into alternating +/- streamwise-moving streaks (red/blue) associated with `rolls' visible in the front y,z plane, which draw the + streamwise (red) fluid down from the top wall and - streamwise (blue) up from the bottom
* 200 < t < 250 : an instability grows and destroys the system of streaks and rolls
* 250 < t < 300 : less organized flow ensues, with roll-streak patterns emerging here and there, now and then
====== Turbulent dynamics in a 'minimal flow unit' ======
file=/movies/tutorial/hkws1s2.flv&image=/movies/tutorial/hkws1s3movie.png&repeat=none
The dynamics of the system above are complex, so for the time being we focus on a cell with smaller aspect ratios,
just big enough to contain one pair of alternating roll-streak structures. The cell size of [1.75 π, 2, 1.2 π]
and Reynolds number of 400 is from Hamilton, Kim, and Waleffe (1995), an important paper that identified the
dynamics seen above as a 'self-sustaining process' in plane Couette flow. Observe this repetitive but nonperiodic
cycle of behavior
- streaks and rolls that are nearly uniform in x, the streamwise direction
- growth of a roughly sinusoidal-in-x instability in the roll-streak structures
- destruction of the structures, finer scale fluctuations, and higher dissipation
- reformation of the roll-streak structures
====== Periodic orbits ======
file=/movies/hkw/P68p07.flv&image=/movies/hkw/P68p07.png&repeat=none
file=/movies/hkw/P99p70.flv&image=/movies/hkw/P99p70.png&repeat=none
We have computed a number of //exact periodic orbits// in the system seen above. Two are shown above; there are more
in the [[database:hkw|channelflow database of exact solutions]]. The periodic orbits repeat themselves exactly after a
finite time. This opens up a number of
interesting possibilities for //dynamical analysis of turbulence//. For example, we can compute the eigenvalues and
eigenfunctions of the orbits and so determine the linear stability of turbulent trajectories. The orbits also do quite
well in capturing first and second-order statistics of the turbulent flow, i.e. the mean flow and Reynolds stresses.