Abstract
The renormalization group and operator product expansion are applied to the model of a passive scalar quantity advected by the Gaussian self-similar velocity field with finite, and not small, correlation time. The inertial-range energy spectrum of the velocity is chosen in the form E(k) proportional, variant k(1-2 epsilon ), and the correlation time at the wave number k scales as k(-2+eta). Inertial-range anomalous scaling for the structure functions and other correlation functions emerges as a consequence of the existence in the model of composite operators with negative scaling dimensions, identified with anomalous exponents. For eta> epsilon, these exponents are the same as in the rapid-change limit of the model; for eta< epsilon, they are the same as in the limit of a time-independent (quenched) velocity field. For epsilon =eta (local turnover exponent), the anomalous exponents are nonuniversal through the dependence on a dimensionless parameter, the ratio of the velocity correlation time, and the scalar turnover time. The nonuniversality reveals itself, however, only in the second order of the epsilon expansion and the exponents are derived to order epsilon (2), including anisotropic contributions. It is shown that, for moderate order of the structure function n, and the space dimensionality d, finite correlation time enhances the intermittency in comparison with both the limits: the rapid-change and quenched ones. The situation changes when n and/or d become large enough: the correction to the rapid-change limit due to the finite correlation time is positive (that is, the anomalous scaling is suppressed), it is maximal for the quenched limit and monotonically decreases as the correlation time tends to zero.
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