skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: An Eigenvalue‐Based Framework for Constraining Anisotropic Eddy Viscosity
Abstract Eddy viscosity is employed throughout the majority of numerical fluid dynamical models, and has been the subject of a vigorous body of research spanning a variety of disciplines. It has long been recognized that the proper description of eddy viscosity uses tensor mathematics, but in practice it is almost always employed as a scalar due to uncertainty about how to constrain the extra degrees of freedom and physical properties of its tensorial form. This manuscript borrows techniques from outside the realm of geophysical fluid dynamics to consider the eddy viscosity tensor using its eigenvalues and eigenvectors, establishing a new framework by which tensorial eddy viscosity can be tested. This is made possible by a careful analysis of an operation called tensor unrolling, which casts the eigenvalue problem for a fourth‐order tensor into a more familiar matrix‐vector form, whereby it becomes far easier to understand and manipulate. New constraints are established for the eddy viscosity coefficients that are guaranteed to result in energy dissipation, backscatter, or a combination of both. Finally, a testing protocol is developed by which tensorial eddy viscosity can be systematically evaluated across a wide range of fluid regimes.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1912420
PAR ID:
10534376
Author(s) / Creator(s):
Publisher / Repository:
AGU
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Volume:
16
Issue:
8
ISSN:
1942-2466
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract The thickness‐weighted average (TWA) framework, which treats the residual‐mean flow as the prognostic variable, provides a clear theoretical formulation of the eddy feedback onto the residual‐mean flow. The averaging operator involved in the TWA framework, although in theory being an ensemble mean, in practice has often been approximated by a temporal mean. Here, we analyze an ensemble of North Atlantic simulations at mesoscale‐permitting resolution (1/12°). We therefore recognize means and eddies in terms of ensemble means and fluctuations about those means. The ensemble dimension being orthogonal to the temporal and spatial dimensions negates the necessity for an arbitrary temporal or spatial scale in defining the eddies. Eddy‐mean flow feedbacks are encapsulated in the Eliassen‐Palm (E‐P) flux tensor and its convergence indicates that eddy momentum fluxes dominate in the separated Gulf Stream. The eddies can be interpreted to contribute to the zonal meandering of the Gulf Stream and a northward migration of it in the meridional direction. Downstream of the separated Gulf Stream in the North Atlantic Current region, the interfacial form stress convergence becomes leading order in the E‐P flux convergence. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract The classical Smagorinsky model's solution is an approximation to a (resolved) mean velocity. Since it is an eddy viscosity model, it cannot represent a flow of energy from unresolved fluctuations to the (resolved) mean velocity. This model has recently been corrected to incorporate this flow and still be well‐posed. Herein we first develop some basic properties of the corrected model. Next, we perform a complete numerical analysis of two algorithms for its approximation. They are tested and proven to be effective. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Lateral mesoscale eddy-induced tracer transport is traditionally represented in coarse-resolution models by the flux–gradient relation. In its most complete form, the relation assumes the eddy tracer flux as a product of the large-scale tracer concentration gradient and an eddy transport coefficient tensor. However, several recent studies reported that the tensor has significant spatiotemporal complexity and is not uniquely defined, that is, it is sensitive to the tracer distributions and to the presence of nondivergent (“rotational”) components of the eddy flux. These issues could lead to significant biases in the representation of the eddy-induced transport. Using a high-resolution tracer model of the Gulf Stream region, we examine the diffusive and advective properties of lateral eddy-induced transport of dynamically passive tracers, reevaluate the utility of the flux–gradient relation, and propose an alternative approach based on modeling the local eddy forcing by a combination of diffusion and generalized eddy-induced advection. Mesoscale eddies are defined by a scale-based spatial filtering, which leads to the importance of new eddy-induced terms, including eddy-mean covariances in the eddy fluxes. The results show that the biases in representing these terms are noticeably reduced by the new approach. A series of targeted simulations in the high-resolution model further demonstrates that the approach outperforms the flux–gradient model in reproducing the stirring and dispersing effect of eddies. Our study indicates potential to upgrade the traditional flux–gradient relation for representing the eddy-induced tracer transport. 
    more » « less
  4. Langmuir turbulence consists of Langmuir circulation (LC) generated at the surface of rivers, lakes, bays, and oceans by the interaction between the wind-driven shear and surface gravity waves. In homogeneous shallow water, LC can extend to the bottom of the water column and interact with the bottom boundary layer. Large-eddy simulation (LES) of LC in shallow water was performed with the finite volume method and various forms of subgrid-scale (SGS) model characterized by different near-wall treatments of the SGS eddy viscosity. The wave forcing relative to wind forcing in the LES was set following the field measurements of full-depth LC during the presence of LC engulfing a water column 15 m in depth in the coastal ocean, reported in the literature. It is found that the SGS model can greatly impact the structure of LC in the lower half of the water column. Results are evaluated in terms of (1) the Langmuir turbulence velocity statistics and (2) the lateral (crosswind) length scale and overall cell structure of LC. LES with an eddy viscosity with velocity scale in terms of S and Ω (where S is the norm of the strain rate tensor and Ω is the norm of the vorticity tensor) and a Van Driest wall damping function (referred to as the S-Omega model) is found to provide best agreement with pseudo-spectral LES in terms of the lateral length scale and overall cell structure of LC. Two other SGS models, namely the dynamic Smagorinsky model and the wall-adapting local-eddy viscosity model are found to provide less agreement with pseudo- spectral LES, for example, as they lead to less coherent bottom convergence of the cells and weaker associ ated upward transport of slow downwind moving fluid. Finally, LES with the S-Omega SGS model is also found to lead to good agreement with physical measurements of LC in the coastal ocean in terms of Langmuir turbulence decay during periods of surface heating 
    more » « less
  5. It has been established that Newton’s law of viscosity fails for fluids under strong confinement as the strain-rate varies significantly over molecular length-scales. We thereby investigate if a nonlocal shear stress accounting for the strain-rate of an adjoining region by a convolution relation with a nonlocal viscosity kernel can be employed to predict the gravity-driven isothermal flow of a Weeks–Chandler–Andersen fluid in a nanochannel. We estimate, using the local average density model, the fluid’s viscosity kernel from isotropic bulk systems of corresponding state points by the sinusoidal transverse force method. A continuum model is proposed to solve the nonlocal hydrodynamics whose solutions capture the key features and agree qualitatively with the results of non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, with deviations observed mostly near the fluid–channel interface. 
    more » « less