Observing a dynamical skeleton of turbulence in Taylor-Couette flow experiments.
Christopher J CrowleyJ L Pughe-SanfordW TolerRoman O GrigorievMichael F SchatzPublished in: Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences (2023)
Recent work shows that recurrent solutions of the equations governing fluid flow play an important role in structuring the dynamics of turbulence. Here, an improved version of an earlier method (Krygier et al. 2021 J. Fluid. Mech. 923 , A7 and Crowley et al. 2022 Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 119 , e2120665119) is used for detecting and analyzing intervals of time when turbulence 'shadows' (spatially and temporally mimics) recurrent solutions in both numerical simulations and laboratory experiments. We find that all the recurrent solutions shadowed in numerics are also shadowed in experiment, and the corresponding statistics of shadowing agree. Our results set the stage for experimentally grounded dynamical descriptions of turbulence in a variety of wall-bounded shear flows, enabling applications to forecasting and control. This article is part of the theme issue 'Taylor-Couette and related flows on the centennial of Taylor's seminal Philosophical Transactions paper (part 1)'.