Abstract

It is generally believed that the temperature and the velocity fields are highly coupled in compressible wall-bounded turbulence. In the present study, we employ a linear model, i.e. the two-dimensional spectral linear stochastic estimation (SLSE), to study this coupling from the perspective of the multi-scale energy-containing eddies. Particular attention is paid to the relevant statistical characteristics of the temperature field. The connections of the two fields are found to be varied with the wall-normal position in the boundary layer. In a nutshell, their entanglement is strongest in the near-wall region, and only the extreme thermal events cannot be captured by SLSE. In the logarithmic region, only the scales that correspond to the attached eddies and the very large-scale motions (VLSMs) are firmly coupled. The near-wall footprints of the former are organized in an additive manner and fulfil the predictions of the celebrated attached-eddy model. In the outer region, the two fields are linearly coupled only at the scales corresponding to VLSMs. These findings are demonstrated to be insensitive to the Mach number effects and ascribed to the similarity between the momentum and the heat transfer in compressible wall turbulence. It is also shown that it is the Reynolds number rather than Mach number that acts as a key similarity parameter in constructing their coupling. The framework built in the present study may pave a way for investigating the multi-physics coupling in turbulence, and reinforcing our analysing and modelling capability to the interrelated problems.

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