Kg. Oetzel et Gk. Vallis, STRAIN, VORTICES, AND THE ENSTROPHY INERTIAL RANGE IN 2-DIMENSIONAL TURBULENCE, Physics of fluids, 9(10), 1997, pp. 2991-3004
The properties of vortices in a strain field are used to construct a p
henomenological theory of the enstrophy inertial range in two-dimensio
nal incompressible turbulence. The theory, based in part on the result
s and behavior of numerical simulations, attempts to combine spectral
inertial range theories of the Kolmogorov type with the dynamics of vo
rtex interactions in physical space. It is based on the assumptions th
at coherent vortices can survive in a turbulent flow if of sufficient
strength compared to the background straining field, and that coherent
structures feel a mean strain field, independent of their scale. The
first assumption is suggested by a result in the theory of uniform ell
iptic vortices, while the second comes from numerical simulations. The
theory employs a single non-dimensional parameter, essentially the ra
tio between the enstrophy flux and the mean strain, which then charact
erizes flows from extremely intermittent decaying turbulence to nearly
Gaussian passive scalar dynamics. The theory predicts that in forced
two-dimensional turbulence, coherent structures reside in a ''backgrou
nd'' straining field. The coherent vortices will dominate the flow at
a sufficiently large scale, with a fairly abrupt transition at a small
scale to a flow in which the classical k(-1) enstrophy spectrum holds
. In this classical region small amplitude vortices do not survive bec
ause the (large-scale) straining field is of larger amplitude than the
(small-scale) vorticity. The vorticity itself is passively advected i
n this regime. If the enstrophy flux is very small compared to the ens
trophy itself, then the dynamics will be highly intermittent. with a s
pectrum determined by the spectrum of the vortices themselves, rather
than by the dynamics of the enstrophy flux. The theory predicts that a
t small scales in forced-dissipative two-dimensional turbulence the en
ergy spectrum will obey the classical enstrophy inertial range predict
ions even though the non-linear interactions remain spectrally non-loc
al. Passive scalar dynamics are predicted to be similar to vortex dyna
mics, at small scales. Available numerical simulations are consistent
with these suggestions. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics.