Comprehensive open datasets of stratified turbulence forced in vertical vorticity or wave modes


Pierre Augier, Vincent Labarre,
Giorgio Krstulovic and Sergey Nazarenko


European Turbulence Conference, 4-6 Sept. 2023

Turbulence influenced by a stable density stratification

Motivations

  • Internal gravity waves turbulence proposed to explain ocean measurements

Summary

  • Internal gravity waves (IGW), “vortices”, shear modes, small-scale turbulence

  • Horizontal Froude number \(F_h\) and buoyancy Reynolds number \(\R = Re {F_h}^2\)

  • LAST regime \(F_h<0.02\), \(\R>20\):

    • downscale energy cascade
    • anisotropic spectra

Brethouwer, Billant, Chomaz & Lindborg (2007)

\(\rho'(x, z)\)

Turbulence influenced by a stable density stratification

Questions

  • Regime corresponding to the oceanic waves?
  • Effect of forcing, universality?
  • Regimes in \((F_h, \R)\) space?
  • IG wave turbulence? Nonlinearity?
  • Mixing modeling?

Would be good to have “Foundational” open datasets

  • Span the \(\FhR\) space
  • Different forcing schemes

We built 2 first datasets with \(\neq\) forcing (as Waite & Bartelo, 2004, 2006, Lindborg & Brethouwer, 2007)

  • forced in vortices
  • forced in IG waves
This presentation: only “wave” forcing!

Span the \(\FhR\) space

Previous studies

This dataset (“wave” forcing)

Open datasets and Open-source software

  • Reproductibility

  • Reusability

    • auto-documented standard file formats.

    • software easy to extend.

  • Easily understandable/usable: not only raw states. Open software to compute, read, load and represent advanced outputs.

The FluidDyn project and Fluidsim

FluidDyn: a project to foster open source and Python in fluid mechanics. A set of open source collaborative Python packages: fluidsim, fluidimage, fluidlab, …

Fluidsim:

  1. A framework to create CFD solvers from whatever (for ex. Snek5000, Fluidsimfoam)

  2. Pseudo-spectral Fourier solvers (ns2d, ns3d, ns3d.strat, sw1l, …).

Documented, tested, very efficient, dev hosted in foss.heptapod.net

Numerical methods

  • ns3d.strat Fluidsim solver

    (Navier-Stokes equations with constant \(N\), pseudo-spectral Fourier)

  • Forcing

    • Slow internal gravity waves (\(\omega/N \simeq 0.3\))

    • Large horizontal scales

    • Constant energy injection rate (\(P_K = 1\))

    • Time correlated

  • Shear modes removed from the dynamics

  • Input parameters: \(N\) and \(\nu\) (\(F_h\) and \(Re\))

  • Diffusion

    Mostly DNS or quasi DNS (\(k_{max} \eta \simeq 1\)) but hyperviscosity for few simulations

Large and small isotropy coefficients

Large scale isotropy

\[I_{velo} = \frac{3 E_{K_z}}{E_K}\]

Small scale isotropy

\[I_{diss} = \frac{1 - \varepsilon_{Kz}/\varepsilon_K}{ 1 - 1/3}\]


Isotropic turbulence \(\Rightarrow I_{velo} = I_{diss} = 1\)

Regimes from small and large isotropy coefficients

Brethouwer et al. (2007), …

Mixing coefficient \(\Gamma\) and energy ratio \(E_A/E_K\)

Maffioli (2017), Garanaik & Venayagamoorthy (2019), Le Reun, Favier & Le bars (2018)

Total energy and toroidal energy

Same forcing (energy injection rate and scales) for all simuls

Turbulence \(\Rightarrow U^3 \sim \varepsilon L\)

Energy in “vortices”

Spatial and temporal spectra

\(F_h = 0.024\) and \(\R = 13\) (LAST like)

  • Strongly anisotropic
  • \({k_h}^{-5/3}\) and steep vert. spectra
  • Large toroidal spectra (vortices)

Proportion of weakly nonlinear internal waves

(from spatiotemporal spectra)

Conclusions

Open data / open software

  • More than 40 simulations (spanning the \((F_h,\ \R)\) space) for each forcing type, soon available as open datasets!

  • Many different types of outputs and in particular spatiotemporal spectra

Results on strat. turbulence forced in waves

  • 5 regimes (Viscosity affected, LAST, Optimal, Weakly strat., Passive scalar)

  • Indisputable observation of the \(\Gamma \sim {F_h}^{-1}\) and \({F_h}^{-2}\) scalings

  • For \(F_h\ll 1\) and \(\R>10\) (relevant for oceans), not a pure wave cascade:

    • Strong vortices, LAST like
    • Weakly non-linear waves dominated by other processes