Quantifying air-water turbulence with moment field equations

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Abstract

Energy transfer in turbulent fluids is non-Gaussian. We quantify non-Gaussian energy transfer between the atmosphere and bodies of water using a turbulent diffusion operator coupled with temporally self-affine velocity distributions and a recursive integration method that produce multifractal measures. The measures serve as input to a system of moment field equations (derived from Navier-Stokes) that generate and track high-frequency gravity waves that propagate through the water surface (as a result of the air-water interactions). The dimension of the support of the air-water turbulence produced by our methods falls within the range of theory and observation, and correspondingly, hindcast statistical measures of the water-wave surface such as significant water-wave height and wave period are well correlated to observational buoy data. Further, our recursive integration method can be used by spectral resolving phase-averaged models to interpolate temporal wind data to smaller scales to capture the non-Gaussian behaviour of the air-water interaction.

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Conroy, C. J., Mandli, K. T., & Kubatko, E. J. (2021). Quantifying air-water turbulence with moment field equations. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 917. https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2021.242

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