|  Turbulence | 
In General
  > s.a. chaos; Reynolds Number.
  * Idea: An eddy-like state of
    fluid motion where the inertial-vortex forces of the eddies are larger than
    any of the other forces that tend to damp the eddies out; Characteristics are
    the apparently random local eddies and whirlpools, diffusion, and dissipation.
  * History: The first serious study
    began with Reynolds, who proposed that its onset is due to instabilities in the
    laminar flow, that can be characterized (in a classical fluid) by the Reynolds
    number; This is now thought to be too simplistic; Reaching the critical value for
    R is only a sufficient condition, and there are some flows that do not
    have a critical Reynolds number; Very little is understood from first principles,
    and it has famously been called the last great unsolved problem of classical physics.
  * Goal: There is no consensus even
    on what finding a solution to the problem means; According to engineers, finding
    mean velocity profiles, wall stresses, and p gradients (use statistical
    theory, from O Reynolds on), and the motivation is reducing the energy spent in
    overcoming the drag caused by turbulence; For physicists, the goal is understanding
    the non-linear processes and the details of motions at various scales.
  * Basic concepts: Randomness,
    eddy viscosity, cascade, scaling.
  * And chaos: The approach to
    turbulence has been shown to be chaotic for certain systems, following the predictions
    of Ruelle & Takens (1971), and contrary to the Landau-Hopf theory; Turbulent
    flow itself is thought to be chaotic, but this cannot be experimentally tested.
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia page. 
Related Topics > s.a. approaches to quantum gravity;
  magnetism [megnetohydrodynamics]; Scale Invariance;
  sound [analog metric viewpoint]; Transport.
  * Superfluid turbulence: Shows
    quantized vortices (& Onsager, Feynman).
  * Magnus effect: A turbulence and
    viscosity effect; For a moving ball, a region of turbulence develops downstream;
    If the ball spins, the region is asymmetric, more on the side of the trailing edge,
    and exerts a force on the ball in the same direction as the Bernoulli effect;
    Applications: Golf balls, it explains why dimples are effective.
  * Batchelor's Law: A law that
    describes the size and distribution of the swirls and eddies that form as fluids
    mix, forming a complex structure similar to a fractal.
  @ Superfluid turbulence: Donnelly SA(88)nov;
    > s.a. Superfluids.
  @ Magnus effect: Nathan AJP(08)feb [and flight of baseball].
  @ Applications: Leung & Gibson CJOL(04)ap/03 [in geophysics and astrophysics];
    Ghosh et al PRS(05) [enhancing particle coalescence].
  @ Quantum fluids: Fisher & Pickett pw(06)apr;
    Vinen & Donnelly PT(07)apr;
    Tsubota CP(09) [superfluid helium and Bose-Einstein condensates];
    Nemirovskii PRP(13) [rev].
  @ Numerical simulations:
    Smits & Marusic PT(13)sep [wall-bounded];
    > s.a. computational physics.
  @ Other approaches:
    Canuto & Dubovikov IJMPA(97);
    Kozyrev TMP(08) [ultrametric theory];
    Jejjala ert al IJMPD(10)-a1005-GRF [string theory].
  @ And chaos: Ruelle 95;
    Li a1306
      [Reynolds number and the distinction between turbulence and chaos].
  @ In astrophysics and cosmology: 
    Low ap/03-in;
    Leubner et al AiG(06)ap [plasma fluctuations, non-extensive entropy];
    Esquivel & Lazarian ApJ(10)-a0905 [Tsallis statistics approach];
    Gaite a1202 [cosmic structure];
    > s.a. black-hole phenomenology; interstellar
      matter; Intergalactic Matter.
  @ Other topics: Gurarie ht/95 [and statistical physics, field theory];
    Gotoh & Nakano JSP(03) [role of pressure];
    Galanti & Tsinober PLA(04) [ergodicity];
    Choi et al mp/04 [wave turbulence, rev];
    Lück et al PLA(06) [coherence length];
    Hof et al PRL(08)
      [evidence for transient nature of all turbulence];
    news cosmos(20)jan [proof of Batchelor's Law];
    Migdal a2005 [stationary vorticity distribution];
    Monsalve et al PRL(20) [observing weak turbulence].
References
  @ Historical: Reynolds PTRS(1883);
    Darrigol HSPBS(02) [XIX century];
    Eyink & Sreenivasan RMP(06) [Onsager];
    Bodenschatz & Eckert in(11)-a1107 [Prandtl].
  @ Intros, reviews: Deissler RMP(84);
    Dwoyer et al ed-85;
    Frisch & Orszag PT(90)jan;
    Kadanoff PT(95)sep;
    L'vov & Procaccia PW(96);
    Gawedzki cd/96 [intro];
    Gibson AMR(96)ap/99 [review];
    Nelkin AJP(00)apr [RL];
    Bernard cm/00-ln;
    Tabeling PRP(02) [2D];
    Barenghi pw(04)dec;
    Falkovich & Sreenivasan PT(06)apr [universal properties].
  @ Texts: Mathieu & Scott 00;
    Davidson 04 [r PT(05)oct].
  @ General references:
    Muriel PhyA(09) [proposed definitions];
    Benzi & Biferale JSP(09) [and the Parisi-Frisch multifractal conjecture];
    Eling et al CP(11)-a1004 [geometrization];
    Smart PT(11)jan;
    Bardos & Titi JoT(13)-a1301-conf [mathematical tools];
    Calzetta a2010 [relativistic].
  @ Statistical approach: Ruelle JSP(14) [non-equilibrium statistical mechanics];
    Leschziner 15 [graduate text];
    Iyer et al PRX(19) [velocity circulation as a bifractal].
  @ Scaling: Gawedzki ht/97;
    Falkovich et al RMP(01);
    Carbone et al RNC(04);
    Bershadskii JSP(07) [finite-size corrections];
    Flandoli et al CMP(08);
    Renner & Peinke JSP(12) [scaling models];
    Berera & Clark PRE-a1909 [and attractor dimension].
  @ Other systems:
    Naulin et al PLA(04) [plasma, statistical];
    Zakharov et al PRP(04) [1D waves];
    Wyngaard 10
      [Earth's atmosphere, r PT(11)jan,
      PRS(11)];
    news Phy(12)jul
      [droplets throwing out a fine spray as they hit a liquid surface];
Green et al PRX(14) [turbulence and the gravity-fluid correspondence].
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