Abstract

In high-Reynolds-number turbulence the spatial distribution of velocity fluctuation at small scales is strongly non-uniform. In accordance with the non-uniformity, the distributions of the inertial and viscous forces are also non-uniform. According to direct numerical simulation (DNS) of forced turbulence of an incompressible fluid obeying the Navier–Stokes equation in a periodic box at the Taylor microscale Reynolds number $R_\lambda \approx 1100$ , the average $\langle R_{loc}\rangle$ over the space of the ‘local Reynolds number’ $R_ {loc}$ , which is defined as the ratio of inertial to viscous forces at each point in the flow, is much smaller than the conventional ‘Reynolds number’ given by $Re \equiv UL/\nu$ , where $U$ and $L$ are the characteristic velocity and length of the energy-containing eddies, and $\nu$ is the kinematic viscosity. While both conditional averages of the inertial and viscous forces for a given squared vorticity $\omega ^{2}$ increase with $\omega ^{2}$ at large $\omega ^{2}$ , the conditional average of $R_ {loc}$ is almost independent of $\omega ^{2}$ . A comparison of the DNS field with a random structureless velocity field suggests that the increase in the conditional average of $R_ {loc}$ with $\omega ^{2}$ at large $\omega ^{2}$ is suppressed by the Navier–Stokes dynamics. Something similar is also true for the conditional averages for a given local energy dissipation rate per unit mass. Certain features of intermittency effects such as that on the $Re$ dependence of $\langle R_{loc}\rangle$ are explained by a multi-fractal model by Dubrulle (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 867, 2019, P1).

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