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Nomad March 17, 2004 16:41

Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
In one of his posts below, Tom says as a reply to "Sci":

"... Actually there is no accepted "generalized mathematics" of turbulence only conjectures and oversimplifications.... You also need to remember that chaos is not turbulence..."

----------------------------

Opps. Tom, are you a scholar professor? There isn't a "generalized mathematical form of fluid flow turbulence? Sorry - what equations are you "trying" to solve when you study on a turbulent flow? NAVIER-STOKES (or simply F=MxA)... Do you NOT consider this is the "most" generalized form of turbulence mathematics? Well, then, you are far from classical mechanics. Anyways - I guess you meant somethings else?

My point is that ANY ATTEMPT to simplify a general turbulence equations by dimension reduction will cause big big errors ... AND.. as you know all research centers, universities, scholars, professors, etc are playing with simplified equation forms of generalized form of turbulence mathematics. Therefore, all of these today scholars are on the wrong way. Pity them and their students. You all have spent your life on the wrong ways of your master scholars/professors.

M March 17, 2004 19:11

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Dear Nomad

I guess that the problem is wider than you suppose. The main problem - all our world is built on the heat transformations and Newton's physics.

Even computations become more and more problem of rising of temperature and consuming of electricity than result of computations. Somewhere reckoned that the computational productivity and energy producing will restrict each other.

It still worth from bussines's point of view but not future as a whole.

So let's solve our generalized forms of turbulence mathematics and spend our life on the wrong ways till new energy producing and flight fundamentals will be discovered

cfd dude March 17, 2004 19:33

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
"all of these today scholars are on the wrong way"

Check out some literature and you'll find hundreds of validations of turbulence models against real experimental data. The predictions (and the researchers producing them) can't be all that "wrong" when computation and experiment agree well....


Hrvoje Jasak March 17, 2004 20:05

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Aha. And then there's this embarrasing problem of being able to get decent simulation results either for a plane jet or for a round one (doesn't get much simpler than that!), but not both at the same time with the same model. Turbulence models are a (necessary) simplification of N-S which is more-or-less adequate for engineering purposes. No more and no less.

Incidentally, there is lots of experimental results and lots of turbulence models out there but in the last 10 years that I have been looking, there isn't a single RANS model that does a half-decent job across the whole spectrum of applications. On the basis of this, I personally look turbulence modelling with a slight "oh, yeah" attitude and choose horses (models) for courses (flows) as best I can :)

Nomad March 18, 2004 03:00

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Computation is bringing NOTHING to the oldest problem of classical mechanics; i.e. Newton Physics.

First, you need to check if your main equations (Newton Physics in general and Navier-Stokes for flows as a result of Newton Physics in particular) are correct or not. BUT you have been unable to check your main basic equations yet. You do not have an analitical solution to generalized fluid flow equations, you do not have a complete direct numerical solution to these equations yet, etc etc. And, taking any simplified version of generalized equations will lead big errors if you remember high nonlinearity of these equations and very big instabilities due to them.

"... So let's solve our generalized forms of turbulence mathematics and spend our life on the wrong ways till new energy producing and flight fundamentals will be discovered..."

Well, then enjoy your spending your life on the wrong road. But be careful about not breaking the glasses when your hard works are helping on the discovers of flights. Your flights are giving big damages to the nature and global warming has a faster accelaration due to your flights/planes with full of errors. The life is so that where ever you go to (even in wrong direction) you learn and discover new things. At the end, you see all you have discovered are wrong.

Nomad March 18, 2004 03:08

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
"... Check out some literature and you'll find hundreds of validations of turbulence models against real experimental data. The predictions (and the researchers producing them) can't be all that "wrong" when computation and experiment agree well.... "

---------

Well, computation models use main basic Newton Physics (or Navier Stokes) equations.. So, nothing new here if you aren't sure about Navier Stokes' forms.

As for experiments; You probably know that Experimental Technology too is based on same/similar mathematical equations of classical mechanics. I mean these experimental technologies too are based on such classical mechanic equations. For ex., take hot wire anometry. Whats its main principle? Newton's cooling special formula which relates the temperature/heat to the velocity. So, experimental technology today isn't independent than the classical mechanic equations. So, testing computational results by experimental results is meaningless, absurd.

Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 04:06

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
"chaos is not turbulence"

ummmmm. Turbulent flow exhibits many of the characteristics of chaotic systems:

-sensitive dependence on initial conditions -structural similarity across many scales -aperiodic -space filling

One test to determine if a system is chaotic is to determine the largest Lyapunov exponent. If it's positive then the system is inherently divergent. I wonder if anyone's actually done this test on say DNS data??

Tom March 18, 2004 04:57

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
My main point is that there is more to turbulence than the mathematical theory of chaos. In particular many of the theorems in dynamical systems don't carry over to the Navier-Stokes equations (except in one or two special cases; i.e. 2D with periodic boundary conditions in both directions). In three-dimensions existence of solutions on an arbitrary time interval has still not been proved and this is a prerequisit for the application of inertial manifold theory (although it does not guarantee the existence of said manifold).

Another way to view this is to try to derive the amplitude evolution equation for a Tollmien-Schlitching wave in a boundary layer using rigourous dynamical systems theory - it can't be done with present (rigourous) theory.

In your example of calculating the Lyapunov exponent are you sure that when you do this that you are not assuming something about the solution of the problem that has not been proved?

A good example of why you should not equate chaos and turbulence is if you take and ABC flow which is a laminar periodic (in space and time) solution to the Navier-Stokes equations you will find that the particle path equations are chaotic. However the flow is definitely laminar.

cfd dude March 18, 2004 08:19

what's so wrong with classical mechanics?
 
So there's something wrong with classical mechanics?

The whole idea of modeling is to provide a means of predicting real world behavior in a practical manner. No, models are not universal, they are limited by their assumptions. However you cannot deny they are useful when applied within their constraints. Take a look at all the systems and components that have been designed, in part or whole, using CFD methods. How wrong can classical mechanics be when those systems perform the way the designers and engineers intended?

Extending your arguments, a CFD solution is not valid unless no modeling is done. Okay.... Just try doing DNS for a high Reynolds number flow about a complete aircraft. Gee, that's practical. I may get a result by the time I retire. Or I can use a turbulence model and get results in a few hours that match wind tunnel data to within a few percent.

Or is a few percent from reality "too much error" for you?


Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 08:27

Re: what's so wrong with classical mechanics?
 
"The scientist is interested in the right answer, the engineer in the best answer now." Golder, H.Q.

"All models are wrong - but some may be useful" G. E. Box

The real art to modelling is gaining the necessary experience and confidence to know how innaccruate you can be but stil be useful.

Not all CFD is applied to mission critical applications where the fluid beahviour is inherent in the designed functionality.

cfd dude March 18, 2004 08:37

Re: what's so wrong with classical mechanics?
 
I couldn't agree with you more. And with the quote of G.E. Box! I like that one!

I just don't believe Nomad's blanket statements about how "everything is so wrong" can have much validity when these supposedly erroneous ways have seen numerous successful applications and validations.

Nomad March 18, 2004 09:29

Re: the problem is....
 
Although these equations are a simplified form of general Newtonian Mechanics, lets suppose these equations are generalized form of fluid flows. So, you have a generalized form of fluid flow called Navier-Stokes Eqns. BUT ... you are not sure if these equations REALLY represent the physical form of flows BECAUSE you have no complete/analytical solution to these full equations set yet and you know these equations are based on many assumptions assumed when building them first time.

Now, the problem is... You all are using these equations as "correct reference" - implying/meaning that you suppose they are representing the physics of flows. REALLY SO? You are unable to prove that.

BUT you get some useful results???? I'm sorry - but this way of thinking or current science philosophy i.e. the philosophy "..doesn't matter we are on the correct or wrong way - we are obtaining some useful applications.." is totally absurd and a shame of science scholars of our day/century. Donkeys too will produce some useful things when they go on the wrong ways. On all wrong ways, you will obtain some useful applications - but the dirt behind your backs will show you are on the wrong way. Since we see the dirt (air pollution, climate changes, etc) behind the back of science scholars today we can say they all are on wrong ways; from basical generalized mathematical forms of flows to experimental technologies based on same mathematics to computational dynamics which use errorrous initial equations. Really, think twice or more before you spend your priceless life time on such absurd approaches of science scholars.

Nomad March 18, 2004 09:49

Re: turbulence and chaos
 
how are you defining turbulence and chaos? your definitions are similar to the ones the scholars (seen in the literatures) define.?

Anyway - Chaos is a sub-group of Turbulence. Randomness is maximum in Turbulence. (lets not use critical Reynold nr. to seperate Turbulence in another category.)

Navier-Stokes are accepted to represent whole fluid flow turbulent motions in all time and space dimensions. BUT really so? UNLESS they are solved nothing is definite. Maybe, whole Navier Stokes equations are symmetric flows in all sections/manifolds/whatever you say and maybe this will be seen one day when NS equations are completely solved analitically. One thing all fluid flow scholars aren't aware of is that even symmetries in stable forms are flowing toward a chaotic structures and then fully turbulent motions where our analitical tools stop working - and some fully turbulent motions in some local regions actually may have very symmetric/coherent forms which we can consider minimum disorder in the flow. So, with millions of parameters sensitive to millions of initial and boundary conditions in any random flow motion, you will not be able to say anything about the flow characterists at any deterministic euclidian space. Dimension reductions using local/point/discrete/etc symmetries will only disturb the real physics of flow if NS really!!! represents the flow physics.

alex March 18, 2004 10:12

Re: turbulence and chaos
 
Jeez, we might all be living in a bottle, the earth might be flat and 2" in diameter for all we know. Lighten up, have a cold guiness:) they've designed those cans using cfd for better taste, try it, it works....

cfd dude March 18, 2004 10:22

Re: turbulence and chaos
 
"lighten up, have a cold Guinness"

Now THAT'S my kind of scientific philosophy! (and my favorite topic in fluids!) :)

Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 10:32

Re: the problem is....
 
"is totally absurd and a shame of science scholars of our day/century"

O dear. We live in a world benefiting from the application of engineering. So often I've seen this academic mentality detaching itself from the real world. CFD should not be the preserve of the scholarly few. Don't try to keep hold of it. Focus instead on automating it to the extent where it can be useful for all. Or do you want to keep it yours? Do you not want others to benefit from the application of CFD to their real world engineering problems? Do you feel that insecure?

$$$s make the world go round and $$$s will ensure that commercial CFD grows and grows. If a company is not growing it is dying. A good thing too.

History is peppered with examples of revolution against a priviledged few....

Dude3 March 18, 2004 10:43

Re: the problem is....
 
Nomad.

Until you are able to come up with the Nomad Equations that define the fluid flow exactly even when discretization etc errors are present, we are simply forced to follow the mainstream and stick with the N-S Equations and turbulence models.

Or perhaps it suffices that you simply show that the N-S equations are wrong. Should be enough for a nice thesis. Oh, wait a minute... how would you do that??? I give up, I am simply not smart enough to do that.

Looking forward to seeing your work published in a journal.

-- Dude3

Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 10:52

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Tom, tell you the truth I don't know eough about the appication of the largest Lyapunuv exponent and what assumptions are implicit.

I'm just wondering if there's enough commonality between chaos (non-linear dynamics etc.) and turbulence for there to be some useful cross pollination of ideas to further our understanding, and application of our uderstanding, of turbulence.

One of the London universities was looking at fractal dimension and its relation to rate of energy dissipation I think.

I seem to remember a few years back the work by York, Grebogi and Ott in applying small perterbations to a non-linear system to coerce the system to a predictable state (pushing a strange attractor to a single point or closed orbit). In theory it held great promise. Similar sorts of things have been done recently with surface mounted micro-actuators, in conjunction with some fancy feedback control systems, in trying to reduce flat plate turbulent shear stress.

Tom March 18, 2004 11:29

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
There's been a long interplay between dynamical systems and fuid dynamics which historically has proved very useful (and I believe still is to this day). However a number of dynamical systems theorists, many of whom had studied no fluid mechanics at all, made rather excessive claims about what they could do with the theory;i.e. much of this involved writing down there favourite normal form an claiming that it solves a specific problem without demonstrating that the required bifurcation/change in stability had/could occur in the physical problem. Examples of the miss use of dynamical systems can be seen in any of its applications to boundary layer theory where, because of the open nature of the flow, many of the fundamental theorems are inapplicable as they stand. However in closed flows, such as Taylor-Couette flow or Rayleigh Benard convection in a closed container, many of the ideas are useful - the Shilnikov mechanism for the bifurcation to chaos in the Taylor-Couette experiment springs to mind.

In short I'd say that ideas from dynamical systems are useful but be aware that sometimes the result you want to use has not been proven for the type of system you are interested in,

hope this makes some since,

Tom.

P March 18, 2004 11:41

Re: turbulence and chaos
 
And while drinking that cool Guiness you can ponder on why the bubbles fall down the glass rather than up. Next time have a look its quite interesting!

Jim Park March 18, 2004 11:43

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
It's surprising that no one has insisted on using relativistic quantum mechanics! : )

Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 11:49

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Thanks Tom. The onset of transition in Rayleigh Benard convection is the one I'm most familiar with. Ed Lorenz examined this type of system to derive his butterfly effect 'theorem' (meteorologist -> non-linear dynamics!).

I hadn't quite appreciated the differences in considering transitional issues in closed systems vs. open systems.

Such bifurcation reminds me of that observed in the Logistics equation. The rate of period doubling I think is pretty constant in such systems and was found by Feignenbaum to be 3.5699.... (Feignenbaum's delta). Apparently "This number has been measured in experiments with chicken hearts, electronic circuits, lasers, chemical reactions, and liquids in their approach to a turbulent state, as well as the bouncing ball system" (from http://www.drchaos.net/drchaos/Book/node44.html). I think it was Taylor-Couette flow (fluid between counter rotating cylinders, one inside another I think?) that was the experiment which exhibited the said rate of bifurcation.

Point is, does any of this help engineers in their prediction of when turbulence might onset??

Tom March 18, 2004 12:10

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
It depends upon your problem. In a boundary layer the answer is no - some features of such flows can be described, at least in the very early stages of transition, using high Reynolds number (matched) asymptotic expansions but we are still a long way from having a clear theory of what's going on (and the equations are nothing like the canonical equations of bifurcation theory - you usually end up with integro-partial differential equations).

In other problems, such as the Shilnikov case in the Taylor-Couette experiment, then the answer is maybe. The transition to a chaotic flow in the Taylor-Couette experiment (turbulence occurs at higher Taylor numbers than the chaotic behaviour) agrees quite well with theory as I recall (Tom Mullin's group did a lot of work on this in the late eighties/early nineties?)

Harry Fulmer March 18, 2004 12:10

Re: turbulence and chaos
 
Interesting enough for Fluent to apply their marketing wizardry:

http://www.fluent.com/about/news/pr/pr5.htm

Nomad March 18, 2004 12:32

Re: the problem is....
 
"... Nomad.

Until you are able to come up with the Nomad Equations that define the fluid flow exactly .... "

------------

You copy-yes-men, you indirectly admit that your have been using wrong equations. I had told Nomad equations to your professors 2 decades ago - BUT their brains were/are so thick that they were unable to understand and they continued to stay as a yes-men / copy-men to get their PhD titles from their old masters.

Now, I'm not here to try to them / you more about Nomad exact equations. Just tell me again that you still admit YOU DO NOT KNOW whether N-S equations represent the flows or not. Yes, you do not know, you are not sure - but still playing your modelling games blindly in your dark room.

"... Looking forward to seeing your work published in a journal ..."

Journals? LOL - All misinformation with politic biased literatures. If you don't kiss their as* of their editors, a top science study can't be published because they do not understand and they are biased. If you kiss their as* of those editors, then your worthless papers can be published as featured papers. Come'n you can cheat people out of the field - but can't cheat such people like this Nomad.

Nomad March 18, 2004 12:46

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
"... It's surprising that no one has insisted on using relativistic quantum mechanics! : ) ..."

---------

Relativistic fluid dynamic equations. Should have been used much more decades ago - Then, today's fluid dynamic (in theoretical, dns, cfd, experimental, etc) fields would be completely in another direction today. But those old scholar! masters of fluid dynamics IGNORED / NEGLECTED "relativistic effects" in the fluid flows. because they were TOO deterministic minds. Fluid dynamic scholers were the most believers of Karma!

Nomad March 18, 2004 12:58

Re: the problem is....
 
You talking like claiming that "CFD is a REAL world application UNLIKE theoretical mathematics of fluid flow"...

Pardon me! If CFD is a real world application, then you're transforming the objects/functions of unreal/dream world to the real world by using CFD? You're dreaming somethings and I see your transformations to the daylight.

As I told in my previous posts, whichever direction (east, west, north, south) you go when doing somethings in this life, you'll do somethings useful. In all directions, you'll obtain some useful applications. But this doesn't mean you're on the correct way. To understand the correct way, look at your behind, look at the residuals you remained behind you. Them these residuals show you're on the wrong way. Before application, think twice. Don't help Mercedes factory if it's not yours... Pity you if you help them.

hmmm.... March 18, 2004 16:20

Re: the problem is....
 
Sounds like someone's a little bitter about not getting through the peer review process....

MT March 18, 2004 16:28

Re: Generalized Math. Form of Turbulence
 
Here is what you might be looking for, Nomad. Jackiw, Roman (2002), Lectures on Fluid Dynamics.

Mathematical description of any physical phenomenon makes certain assumptions. Validity of these models are greatly limited by our understanding of the physical process and/or by the over-simplification due to assumptions. N-S equations produce meaningful results so long as the assumptions used to describe a newtonian fluid are valid. Proof of existence and uniqueness of these equations in 3-D is open problem indicating that we have derived a mathematical model that could be ill-posed problem partly because of such a simple constitutive assumption for the fluid in turbulent flows

Turbulence defined by salient features of non-linear, dissipative, random/chaotic/stochastic systems has given some insights into the actual "fluid turbulence" phenomenon. Clearly, the order within chaos, makes the mathematical tools inapplicable at times.

MT

Saverio March 19, 2004 00:14

Re: the problem is....
 
Well, now I'm curious... Can you post a link to your work? Thanks,

who are you? March 19, 2004 06:40

Re: the problem is....
 
I was wondering what your background, scientifically, is Nomad? Also, I wonder if you are a silly 1st year undergrad, because you sure sound like on. Its a bummer to come across people who live in la-la land, as you clearly do. As I read somewhere, Scientists want the correct answer, Engineers want the best answer NOW. CFD is an amalgamation of these two approaches.

Troll March 19, 2004 11:41

Re: the problem is....
 
I've been following this conversation with a lot of interest. The only conclusion I have so far is that "Nomad" is someone that is often referred to as "troll" in newsgroups.

hmmm.... March 19, 2004 14:21

Re: the problem is....
 
A disgruntled grad school dropout, maybe?

sounds right! March 19, 2004 16:41

Troll - a definition
 
Troll - n. An individual who regularly posts specious arguments, flames or personal attacks to a newsgroup, discussion list, or in email for no other purpose than to annoy someone or disrupt a discussion. Trolls are recognizable by the fact that they have no real interest in learning about the topic at hand - they simply want to utter flame bait. Like the ugly creatures they are named after, they exhibit no redeeming characteristics, and as such, they are recognized as a lower form of life on the net, as in, "Oh, ignore him, he's just a troll."

Nomad March 19, 2004 16:45

Re: the problem is....
 
"..Well, now I'm curious... Can you post a link to your work? Thanks,.."

------

I'm sorry - I don't give. I've never linked my works to errorous completely wrong works in the journals. Science fields long time ago has been a field like "deafs play - blinds dance" mind field. I'd be ashamed of if I had published my any work in any current journal/conference/seminar/etc.

Nomad March 19, 2004 16:49

Re: Troll ? - Then, you intelligent people... you
 
can win an argument/debate against a simple troll.

don't go off topic - stay on topic - and lets see what you know and you don't know. Prove my points wrong.. if you are able to.

Einstein-like scientists are only very very few in millions of so called scientists like you and your master professors. So, you people speaking like that off-topic are a big majority here.

Saverio March 19, 2004 16:52

Re: the problem is....
 
No - just someone enjoying how much of a fuss his goofy statements have drummed up on this site. This being his goal, I assume, he's done a pretty good job! :) Congrats, Nomad. Just quit while you're ahead.

cfd user March 20, 2004 00:39

Re: the problem is....
 
It would be enlightening for all of us if given access to your work. Letting others know your view in specific terms would be quite good. I understand this is the way science progresses.

P March 22, 2004 09:03

Re: Troll ? - Then, you intelligent people... you
 
we dont have to prove your points wrong! More importantly you have to prove your points right. seeing as you wont give any more detail than you speculation then it would be impossible to make an sensible comment about your point. So I dont see the point of your conversation.


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