Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Pattern formation by turbulent cascades.
de Wit, Xander M; Fruchart, Michel; Khain, Tali; Toschi, Federico; Vitelli, Vincenzo.
Afiliación
  • de Wit XM; Department of Applied Physics and Science Education, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
  • Fruchart M; Gulliver, ESPCI Paris, Université PSL, CNRS, Paris, France.
  • Khain T; James Franck Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
  • Toschi F; James Franck Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
  • Vitelli V; Department of Applied Physics and Science Education, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands. f.toschi@tue.nl.
Nature ; 627(8004): 515-521, 2024 Mar.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38509279
ABSTRACT
Fully developed turbulence is a universal and scale-invariant chaotic state characterized by an energy cascade from large to small scales at which the cascade is eventually arrested by dissipation1-6. Here we show how to harness these seemingly structureless turbulent cascades to generate patterns. Pattern formation entails a process of wavelength selection, which can usually be traced to the linear instability of a homogeneous state7. By contrast, the mechanism we propose here is fully nonlinear. It is triggered by the non-dissipative arrest of turbulent cascades energy piles up at an intermediate scale, which is neither the system size nor the smallest scales at which energy is usually dissipated. Using a combination of theory and large-scale simulations, we show that the tunable wavelength of these cascade-induced patterns can be set by a non-dissipative transport coefficient called odd viscosity, ubiquitous in chiral fluids ranging from bioactive to quantum systems8-12. Odd viscosity, which acts as a scale-dependent Coriolis-like force, leads to a two-dimensionalization of the flow at small scales, in contrast with rotating fluids in which a two-dimensionalization occurs at large scales4. Apart from odd viscosity fluids, we discuss how cascade-induced patterns can arise in natural systems, including atmospheric flows13-19, stellar plasma such as the solar wind20-22, or the pulverization and coagulation of objects or droplets in which mass rather than energy cascades23-25.