Abstract

Events in turbulent flows computed by direct numerical simulation (DNS) are often calibrated with properties based on homogeneous isotropic turbulence, advanced by Kolmogorov, and given in Turbulence, U. Frisch, Cambridge Univ. Press, UK (1995). However, these computational procedures are not calibrated using numerical analyses in order to assess their strengths and weaknesses for DNS. This is with the exception in "A critical assessment of simulations for transitional and turbulence flows- Sengupta, T.K., In Proc. of IUTAM Symp. on Advances in Computation, Modeling and Control of Transitional and Turbulent Flows, 491-532, (eds. Sengupta, Lele, Sreenivasan, Davidson), WSPC, Singapore (2016)", where such a calibration has been advocated for numerical schemes using global spectral analysis (GSA) for the convection equation. In recent times, due to growing computing power, simulations have been reported using pseudo-spectral methods, with spatial discretization performed in Fourier spectral space and time-integration by multi-stage Runge-Kutta (RK) methods. Here, we perform GSA of Fourier spectral methods for the first time with RK2 and other multistage Runge-Kutta methods using the model linear convection and convection-diffusion equations. With the help of GSA, various sources of numerical errors are quantified. The major limitations of the RK2-Fourier spectral method are demonstrated for DNS and alternate choices are presented. We specify optimal parameters to achieve the best possible accuracy for simulations. There is a one-to-one correspondence of numerical solutions obtained by linear convection-diffusion equation and nonlinear Navier-Stokes equation with respect to numerical parameters. This enables us to investigate the capabilities of the numerical methods for DNS.

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