Turbulence calculations in magnetization variables
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1802646
DOI10.1016/0168-9274(93)90111-4zbMath0770.76054OpenAlexW2067969444MaRDI QIDQ1802646
Thomas F. Buttke, Alexandre Joel Chorin
Publication date: 8 August 1993
Published in: Applied Numerical Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0vx101xp
incompressible fluid dynamicsreal-space renormalizationvortex statisticsdiscrete Hamiltonian approximation
Related Items
Complementary modes of impulse generation for flow past a three-dimensional obstacle ⋮ Numerical study on the Eulerian–Lagrangian analysis of Navier–Stokes turbulence ⋮ Exact solutions for the fluid impulse for incompressible and compressible flows ⋮ A representation of bounded viscous flow based on Hodge decomposition of wall impulse ⋮ A fourth-order auxiliary variable projection method for zero-Mach number gas dynamics ⋮ Towards an impulse-based Lagrangian model of boundary layer turbulence ⋮ Velocity correlation considered as a ‘scale average’ in a hierarchical particle model of turbulence: Part I. Unbounded hierarchy ⋮ Convergence of gauge method for incompressible flow ⋮ Non-linearity depletion, elementary excitations and impulse formulation in vortex dynamics
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Equilibrium statistics of a vortex filament with applications
- Hairpin removal in vortex interactions
- Vortex equilibria in turbulence theory and quantum analogues
- Hairpin removal in vortex interactions. II
- A maximum-entropy principle for two-dimensional perfect fluid dynamics
- Turbulence: An old challenge and new perspectives
- A vortex model with superfluid and turbulent percolation
- Vorticity and the mathematical theory of incompressible fluid flow
- Convergence of the Random Vortex Method in Two Dimensions
- Statistical mechanics of classical particles with logarithmic interactions
- Statistical mechanics of Euler equations in two dimensions
- On a new way of writing the Navier-Stokes equation. The Hamiltonian formalism
- A Hamiltonian theory for weakly interacting vortices