Abstract
We characterize the statistical and geometrical properties of the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry in a statistically steady forced rotating turbulence experiment. Turbulenceis generated by a set of vertical flaps which continuously inject velocity fluctuations towards the center of a tank mounted on a rotating platform.We first characterize the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry from conventional single-point vorticity statistics. We propose a phenomenological model to explain the emergence of the asymmetry in the experiment, from which we predict scaling laws for the root-mean-square velocity in good agreement with the experimental data. We further quantify the cycloneanticyclone asymmetry using a set of third-order two-point velocity correlations. We focus on the correlations which are nonzero only if the cyclone-anticyclone symmetry is broken. They offer two advantages over single-point vorticity statistics: first, they are defined from velocity measurements only, so an accurate resolution of the Kolmogorov scale is not required; second, they provide information on the scaledependence of the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry. We compute these correlation functions analytically for a random distribution of independent identical vortices. These model correlations describe well the experimental ones, indicating that the cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry is dominated by the large-scale long-lived cyclones. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.
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CITATION STYLE
Gallet, B., Campagne, A., Cortet, P. P., & Moisy, F. (2014). Scale-dependent cyclone-anticyclone asymmetry in a forced rotating turbulence experiment. Physics of Fluids, 26(3). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4867914
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