A central problem of turbulence theory is to produce a predictive model for turbulent fluxes. These have profound implications for virtually all aspects of the turbulence dynamics. In magnetic confinement devices, drift-wave turbulence produces anomalous fluxes via cross-correlations between fluctuations. In this work, we introduce an alternative, data-driven method for parametrizing these fluxes. The method uses deep supervised learning to infer a reduced mean-field model from a set of numerical simulations. We apply the method to a simple drift-wave turbulence system and find a significant new effect which couples the particle flux to the local gradient of vorticity. Notably, here, this effect is much stronger than the oft-invoked shear suppression effect. We also recover the result via a simple calculation. The vorticity gradient effect tends to modulate the density profile. In addition, our method recovers a model for spontaneous zonal flow generation by negative viscosity, stabilized by nonlinear and hyperviscous terms. We highlight the important role of symmetry to implementation of the alternative method.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.101.061201 | DOI Listing |
Phys Rev E
February 2024
Department of Physics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
Inhomogeneous mixing by stationary convective cells set in a fixed array is a particularly simple route to layering. Layered profile structures, or staircases, have been observed in many systems, including drift-wave turbulence in magnetic confinement devices. The simplest type of staircase occurs in passive-scalar advection, due to the existence and interplay of two disparate timescales, the cell turn-over (τ_{H}), and the cell diffusion (τ_{D}) time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
September 2021
Department of Physics, Air University, E-09 Complex, Islamabad, 44000, Pakistan.
Drift wave instabilities (DWI) associated with the two-fluid dynamics seems to be responsible for anomalous transport in modern day tokamaks. Ballooning instabilities tend to exchange flux tubes of different pressure, resulting in convective transport. The micro-level turbulence (drift wave) is coupled with the macro-level (ballooning mode) dynamics in fusion experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
December 2020
Institute for Interfacial Process Engineering and Plasma Technology IGVP, Universität Stuttgart, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
In two-dimensional turbulent systems the redistribution of energy can be described by quadratic nonlinear three-wave interactions, which are limited by resonance conditions. The set of coupling modes can be understood as resonant manifold. It has been predicted by theory that, in the presence of a shear flow, the resonant manifold in wave-number space shrinks in time favoring large-scale structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
June 2020
Department of Physics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.
A central problem of turbulence theory is to produce a predictive model for turbulent fluxes. These have profound implications for virtually all aspects of the turbulence dynamics. In magnetic confinement devices, drift-wave turbulence produces anomalous fluxes via cross-correlations between fluctuations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
February 2020
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08543, USA.
Tertiary modes in electrostatic drift-wave turbulence are localized near extrema of the zonal velocity U(x) with respect to the radial coordinate x. We argue that these modes can be described as quantum harmonic oscillators with complex frequencies, so their spectrum can be readily calculated. The corresponding growth rate γ_{TI} is derived within the modified Hasegawa-Wakatani model.
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