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Scaling of turbulent velocity structure functions: plausibility constraints

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 June 2023

L. Djenidi*
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology – Bombay, Powai, Mumbai 400076, India
R.A. Antonia
Affiliation:
Discipline of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, Science and Environment, University of Newcastle, Newcastle 2308, NSW, Australia
S.L. Tang
Affiliation:
Center for Turbulence Control, Harbin Institute of Technology, Shenzhen 518055, PR China
*
Email address for correspondence: [email protected]

Abstract

The $n$th-order velocity structure function $S_n$ in homogeneous isotropic turbulence is usually represented by $S_n \sim r^{\zeta _n}$, where the spatial separation $r$ lies within the inertial range. The first prediction for $\zeta _n$ (i.e. $\zeta _3=n/3$) was proposed by Kolmogorov (Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR, vol. 30, 1941) using a dimensional argument. Subsequently, starting with Kolmogorov (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 13, 1962, pp. 82–85), models for the intermittency of the turbulent energy dissipation have predicted values of $\zeta _n$ that, except for $n=3$, differ from $n/3$. In order to assess differences between predictions of $\zeta _n$, we use the Hölder inequality to derive exact relations, denoted plausibility constraints. We first derive the constraint $(p_3-p_1)\zeta _{2p_2} = (p_3 -p_2)\zeta _{2p_1} +(p_2-p_1)\zeta _{2p_3}$ between the exponents $\zeta _{2p}$, where $p_1 \leq p_2 \leq p_3$ are any three positive numbers. It is further shown that this relation leads to $\zeta _{2p} = p \zeta _2$. It is also shown that the relation $\zeta _n=n/3$, which complies with $\zeta _{2p} = p \zeta _2$, can be derived from constraints imposed on $\zeta _n$ using the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality, a special case of the Hölder inequality. These results show that while the intermittency of $\epsilon$, which is not ignored in the present analysis, is not incompatible with the plausible relation $\zeta _n=n/3$, the prediction $\zeta _n=n/3 +\alpha _n$ is not plausible, unless $\alpha _n =0$.

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JFM Papers
Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

There is a general consensus that the following power law (or similarity law) holds in the inertial range of homogeneous isotropic turbulence (HIT), at very, if not infinitely, large Reynolds numbers:

(1.1)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^{n}} \sim r^{\zeta_{n}}, \end{equation}

where $\delta u = u(x+r,t) - u(x,t)$ is the longitudinal velocity increment between two points, $r$ is the separation between the two points, and $t$ is the time; the overbar represents classical conventional averaging used regularly in the literature for testing small-scale statistics. The power-law form (1.1) was first introduced for $n=2$ by Kolmogorov (Reference Kolmogorov1941a) (hereafter referred to as K41) on dimensional grounds and written as

(1.2)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^{2}} = C_K (\bar{\epsilon}r)^{\zeta_{2}}, \end{equation}

where $\zeta _2= 2/3$, $C_K$ is supposed to be a universal constant (i.e. independent of the Reynolds number and the macro flow structure), and $\bar {\epsilon }$ is the mean turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate. To arrive at (1.2), often denoted the $2/3$-law, $\overline {(\delta u)^{2}}$ is assumed to depend only on $r$ and $\bar {\epsilon }$ in a scaling range, denoted the inertial range, where the effects of viscosity and the large-scale motion are negligible. This implies that the Reynolds number is infinite or at least very large. However, acting on a remark made by Landau & Lifshitz (Reference Landau and Lifshitz1987), Kolmogorov (Reference Kolmogorov1962) (hereafter referred to as K62) revisited his earlier analysis, and still based on dimensional grounds, proposed

(1.3)\begin{equation} |\overline{(\delta u)^{n}}|= C_{n} \left(\bar{\epsilon}r\right)^{n/3}\left(\frac{L}{r}\right)^{kn(n-3)/2}, \end{equation}

where $k$ is a universal constant. The exponent ${kn(n-3)/2}$ is based on the assumption that the probability density function (p.d.f.) of $\epsilon$ is log-normal; however, this assumption has been shown to be incorrect and abandoned. Notice the absolute value in (1.3), which was dropped in the studies that followed. Using the relation $\bar {\epsilon }=C_\epsilon ({u_0^3}/{L})$ (where $C_\epsilon$ is a constant), (1.3) is commonly expressed as

(1.4)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^{n}}= A_{n} u_0^{n}\left(\frac{r}{L}\right)^{\zeta_{n}}, \end{equation}

with $\zeta _n=n/3 +\alpha _n$, where $\alpha _n$ is a real number; the scaling set $(u_0, L)$ is representative of the large-scale motion ($u_0$ is often taken as the velocity root mean square (r.m.s.)), and $A_{n}$ is a positive numerical constant that may depend on the flow macrostructure but is Reynolds-number-independent (see K62). The power law (1.4) (or (1.2) for that matter) is yet to be derived from the Navier–Stokes equations. Frisch (Reference Frisch1995) used this expression for $n=2p$ (where $p$ is a positive integer) and applied the Hölder inequality to it to derive his convexity inequality (see relation (2.2) below). The length scale $L$ was introduced initially by K62 to account for the intermittency of the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation $\epsilon$ (Frisch Reference Frisch1995) caused by the large-scale motion (Landau & Lifshitz Reference Landau and Lifshitz1987).

In the literature, another scaling set based on the Kolmogorov velocity ($v_K= (\nu \bar {\epsilon })^{1/4}$) and Kolmogorov length ($\eta = (\nu ^3/\bar {\epsilon })^{1/4}$) is often used for presenting the data, and we can use this to rewrite (1.4). Using a simple change of variables where we introduce $v_K$ and $\eta$ in (1.4), and noting that for HIT, $\eta /L= C_\epsilon ^{-1/4}\,Re_L^{-3/4}$ and $v_K/u_0=C_\epsilon ^{1/4}\,Re_L^{-1/4}$ (we use the relation $\bar {\epsilon } = C_\epsilon ({u_0^3}/{L})={v_K^3}/{\eta }$, where $Re_L=u_0L/\nu$ is the large-scale Reynolds number and $C_\epsilon$ is a constant), we obtain the trivial relation

(1.5)\begin{equation} A_nu_0^n \Bigg(\frac{r}{L}\Bigg)^{\zeta_{n}} = A_nv_K^n\, \frac{Re_L^{(n-3\zeta_n)/4}}{C_\epsilon^{(n+\zeta_n)/4}} \Bigg(\frac{r}{\eta}\Bigg)^{\zeta_{n}}, \end{equation}

or, following Buaria & Sreenivasan (Reference Buaria and Sreenivasan2022) (see § IV in the supplemental material of Buaria & Sreenivasan Reference Buaria and Sreenivasan2022),

(1.6)\begin{equation} A_nu_0^n \Bigg(\frac{r}{L}\Bigg)^{\zeta_{n}} = A_nv_K^n\, \frac{C_\epsilon^{-\zeta_n}}{15^{(n-3\zeta_n)/4}}\,Re_\lambda^{(n-3\zeta_n)/2} \Bigg(\frac{r}{\eta}\Bigg)^{\zeta_{n}}, \end{equation}

since $Re_L= C_\epsilon \,Re_\lambda ^2/15$, where $Re_\lambda =u_0\lambda /\nu$ is the Taylor microscale Reynolds number. It is important for the rest of the analysis to stress that relation (1.5) (or (1.6)) is an exact identity for HIT and, accordingly, both sides of this identity have the exact same range of $r$, i.e. $\eta \ll r \ll L$. The explicit Reynolds number dependence on the right-hand side of (1.5) and (1.6), which results from the change of variables, warrants a comment. We observe that when $n=3$, the terms $Re_L^{(n-3\zeta _n)/4}$ and $Re_\lambda ^{(n-3\zeta _n)/2}$ disappear, i.e. the explicit Reynolds number dependence vanishes from the right-hand side of (1.5) and (1.6) because of the $4/5$-law (Kolmogorov Reference Kolmogorov1941b)

(1.7)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^3}={-}\tfrac{4}{5} \bar{\epsilon}r; \end{equation}

that is, $\zeta _3=1$. Both (1.5) and (1.6) can now be written as

(1.8)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^3}=A_3C_\epsilon \bar{\epsilon}r. \end{equation}

Comparing (1.8) with (1.7) shows that $A_3=-(4/5)C_\epsilon ^{-1}$. Recall that the $4/5$-law exists only when the Reynolds number dependence disappears from the Kármán–Howarth (KH) equation (Kármán & Howarth Reference Kármán and Howarth1938) when expressed in terms of $\overline {(\delta u)^2}$ and $\overline {(\delta u)^3}$. This means that the effects of viscosity and the large-scale motion, referred to as the finite Reynolds number (FRN) effect (Antonia & Burattini Reference Antonia and Burattini2006; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Zhou2019), vanish and the $4/5$-law is verified. Further, there is a strong theoretical basis for the independence of the Reynolds number in the asymptotic case, $Re_L \rightarrow \infty$. For example, Djenidi, Antonia & Tang (Reference Djenidi, Antonia and Tang2019) showed that as $Re_L$ increases, the scaling of the KH equation based on $(v_K, \eta )$ extends to increasingly larger values of $r/\eta$, while the scaling based on $(u_0,L)$ extends to increasingly smaller values of $r/L$. When $Re_L\rightarrow \infty$, both scalings hold over a common range of scales (i.e. the inertial range), and the solutions of the KH equation become Reynolds-number-independent. It is difficult to imagine that while the FRN effect vanishes when $n=3$, it should persist for all other values of $n$. The removal of such dependence for all $n$ requires $\zeta _n=n/3$, which would lead to the existence of a dual scaling where $\overline {(\delta u)^{n}}$ scales with both $(u_0,L)$ and $(v_K,\eta )$ in the inertial range (a plausible derivation of (1.1) based on this dual scaling is given in Appendix A). However, the multifractal approach proposes the following model for $\zeta _n$ (Frisch Reference Frisch1995):

(1.9)\begin{equation} \zeta_n = \inf_h [ph+3-D(h)], \end{equation}

where $h$ is an arbitrary positive scaling exponent, and $D(h)$ is the corresponding multifractal dimension, assumed to be independent of the way turbulent flows are generated (Frisch Reference Frisch1995). The model (1.9), which is based on the intermittency of the velocity and can be related to the multifractal prediction of $\zeta _n$ based on the intermittency of $\epsilon$ (Meneveau & Sreenivasan Reference Meneveau and Sreenivasan1991; Frisch Reference Frisch1995), was developed to mimic the behaviour $\zeta _n=n/3 +\alpha _n$ of the empirically determined $\zeta _n$ with increasing $n$, and the constraint $\zeta _3 =1$.

Clearly, the above discussion illustrates the importance of determining the correct values of $\zeta _n$ as they will provide a definitive answer to the question: is K62 a more suitable descriptor of small-scale turbulence than K41? There are at least two difficulties in relation to estimating $\zeta _n$. First, the prospect of determining the power-law form, such (1.1) or (1.4), from the Navier–Stokes equations is rather grim. That is unfortunate because one cannot be strictly sure that a power-law formulation for $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$ is actually consistent with the Navier–Stokes equations. Indeed, one has to recall that the viscosity is never zero in these equations, while both K41 and K62 assume that $\nu$ has no influence in the inertial range. This leads to the second difficulty, the empirical estimation of $\zeta _n$ from experimental and direct numerical simulation data. Such an approach is hindered by the impossibility of achieving very large Reynolds numbers that would ensure a well-defined inertial range where the conditions $r/\eta \gg 1$ and $r/L \ll 1$ are both satisfied adequately. Nevertheless, it is generally assumed in theories of steady-state small-scale turbulence that the Reynolds number is large enough (but not necessarily infinite) so that the small-scale statistics are Reynolds-number-independent as long as the energy input is balanced by the energy dissipation. The case $\nu =0$ (inviscid flow) is actually excluded as it raises the issue of a singularity or blow-up (see Frisch (Reference Frisch1995), who comments on the potential blow-up at $\nu = 0$); after all, all real flows are viscous. Accordingly, it is in this context that the power-law form (1.4) is assumed to be Reynolds-number-independent and asymptotically correct when the Reynolds number is very large. Further, the experimental and direct numerical simulation data suggest that $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$ , at least for $n = 2$, 3 and 4, tends to approach a power-law behaviour of the form (1.1) as the Reynolds number increases.

It is clear that, at least for a foreseeable future, the ability to reach very large Reynolds numbers in HIT is quite remote, posing a challenging task for estimating $\zeta _n$ empirically. Nevertheless, one can still attempt to test the plausibility of $\zeta _n$ predicted by K41, i.e. $\zeta _n=n/3$, the models based on the intermittency of $\epsilon$ (i.e. (1.9) or $\zeta _n=n/3 +\alpha _n$), or indeed any future model for small-scale turbulence in the inertial range, against exact constraints that have to be satisfied if the predicted values of $\zeta _n$ are to be deemed plausible (Frisch Reference Frisch1995). One such constraint is given by (1.7) and requires $\zeta _3$ to be equal to 1. In this paper, we follow the approach of Frisch (Reference Frisch1995), who proposed a method for assessing the plausibility of predictions for $\zeta _n$. Frisch (Reference Frisch1995) applied the Hölder inequality to (1.4), an approach that is independent of any theoretical phenomenology that underpins (1.4) and yields exact mathematical results. Frisch (Reference Frisch1995) considered only (1.4) or the left-hand side of (1.5). However, since (1.5) is an identity, the same constraints must be imposed on both sides of this identity. This approach is outlined in § 2 where (1.5) (or equivalently (1.6)) is treated as a simple ‘mathematical object’ whose theoretical derivation and physical meaning bear no relevance to the analysis of this section. In § 3, we discuss the consequences of the mathematical results of § 2 in relation to the predictions of $\zeta _n$ based on K41 and intermittency models. We then provide concluding remarks in § 4.

2. Plausibility of the exponents $\zeta _{n}$

2.1. Plausibility constraints on $\zeta _{n}$

In this subsection, we follow K62 and assume that (1.4) – or equivalently, the identity (1.5) – holds in the inertial range. The method for determining constraints for the exponents $\zeta _n$ follows that of Frisch (Reference Frisch1995), who also assumes that (1.4) holds in the inertial range, and is based on determining mathematical constraints with which the power-law exponents must comply. While mathematical constraints, such as those provided by the Cauchy–Schwarz and Hölder inequalities, bear no relation to the Navier–Stokes equations, they nevertheless provide rigorous conditions that must be complied with, and thus can be used as a test for any model that predicts the exponents $\zeta _n$. Indeed, they provide necessary (but not sufficient) conditions for assessing the plausibility of the exponents $\zeta _n$ determined empirically or theoretically (Frisch Reference Frisch1995; Falkovich, Gaweȩdzki & Vergassola Reference Falkovich, Gaweȩdzki and Vergassola2001; Eling & Oz Reference Eling and Oz2015). Any value of $\zeta _n$ that fails this plausibility test must be dismissed. It is thus of interest to apply similar tests to the identities (1.5) and (1.6).

We start by applying the Hölder inequality (Feller Reference Feller1968) to $\overline {(\delta u)^{2p}}$, and follow Frisch (Reference Frisch1995). Thus we obtain

(2.1)\begin{equation} \left(\overline{(\delta u)^{2p_2}}\right)^{(p_3-p_1)} \leq \left(\overline{(\delta u)^{2p_1}}\right)^{(p_3-p_2)} \left(\overline{(\delta u)^{2p_3}}\right)^{(p_2-p_1)} \end{equation}

for any three positive numbers $p_1 \leq p_2 \leq p_3$. When we consider the left-hand side of the identity (1.5), i.e. $\overline {(\delta u)^n} \sim ({r}/{L})^{\zeta _{n}}$, we obtain the following constraint imposed on $\zeta _{2p}$:

(2.2)\begin{equation} (p_3-p_1)\zeta_{2p_2} \geq (p_3 -p_2)\zeta_{2p_1} +(p_2-p_1)\zeta_{2p_3}, \end{equation}

since $r/L \ll 1$ in the inertial range. This inequality, commonly referred to as the convexity inequality, is often used to validate or invalidate the exponents $\zeta _n$ obtained empirically or theoretically (Falkovich et al. Reference Falkovich, Gaweȩdzki and Vergassola2001; Eling & Oz Reference Eling and Oz2015). However, when we now consider the right-hand side of (1.5), i.e. $\overline {(\delta u)^n} \sim ({r}/{\eta })^{\zeta _{n}}$, (2.1) leads to a new constraint on $\zeta _{2p}$:

(2.3)\begin{equation} (p_3-p_1)\zeta_{2p_2} \leq (p_3 -p_2)\zeta_{2p_1} +(p_2-p_1)\zeta_{2p_3}, \end{equation}

since $r/\eta \gg 1$ in the inertial range. Considering that the inequalities (2.2) and (2.3) result from (2.1) applied to both sides of the identity (1.5), they are then satisfied simultaneously. This yields the following relation amongst the exponents $\zeta _{2p}$:

(2.4)\begin{equation} (p_3-p_1)\zeta_{2p_2} = (p_3 -p_2)\zeta_{2p_1} +(p_2-p_1)\zeta_{2p_3}. \end{equation}

Thus for any three positive numbers $p_1 \leq p_2 \leq p_3$, any plausible exponents $\zeta _n$ must obey relation (2.4), which is a plausibility constraint. This constraint is far more restrictive than either (2.2) or (2.3). It is important to recall that (1.5), or equivalently (1.6), and (2.1) and accordingly (2.4) hold only in the inertial range $\eta \ll r \ll L$ when $L/\eta \rightarrow \infty$ as $Re_L \rightarrow \infty$. Now, noting that for $\zeta _0=0$, $\overline {(\delta u)^0} \sim r^{\zeta _0} = 1$, we can see that (2.1) holds also when $p_1=0$. Thus taking $p_1 = 0$, $p_2=1$ and $p_3= n$ ($n \geq 2$) into (2.4) yields

(2.5)\begin{equation} \zeta_{2n} = n \zeta_{2}, \end{equation}

which relates $\zeta _{2n}$ to $\zeta _2$, where the latter remains to be determined. Interestingly, this relation shows that the power-law exponents of even order increase linearly with $n$. We also notice that $\zeta _n=n/3$ verifies this relation, while $\zeta _n=n/3+\alpha _n$ does not unless $\alpha _n=0$. But let us next determine whether a plausible expression for $\zeta _n$ can be derived analytically.

2.2. Determination of plausible $\zeta _{n}$

We apply the Cauchy–Schwarz (CS) inequality, which is a particular case of the Hölder inequality (Feller Reference Feller1968), to $\overline {(\delta u)^{n}}$. For any arbitrary random variables $\phi$ and $\psi$, the CS inequality can be expressed as

(2.6)\begin{equation} |\overline{(\phi \psi)}| ^2 \leq \overline{\phi^2} \times \overline{\psi^2}. \end{equation}

If we select $\phi = {{{(\delta u)}^n}}$ ($n \geq 2$) and $\psi =1$, then (2.6) leads to

(2.7)\begin{equation} |\overline{{{(\delta u)}^n}}| \le {\overline{{{(\delta u)}^{2n}}} ^{1/2}}. \end{equation}

Applying this relation to the left- and right-hand sides of (1.5) yields

(2.8)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} \geq {\zeta_{2n}} \end{equation}

and

(2.9)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} \leq {\zeta_{2n}}, \end{equation}

respectively. Since these two inequalities are constraints imposed on $\zeta _n$ by applying (2.7) to both sides of (1.5), they hold simultaneously, which leads to

(2.10)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} = {\zeta_{2n}}. \end{equation}

Similarly, selecting now $\phi = (\delta u)^{n-1}$ and $\psi = \delta u$, we have

(2.11)\begin{equation} |\overline{(\delta u)^n}| = |\overline{(\delta u)(\delta u)^{n - 1}}| \le \overline{(\delta u)^2} ^{1/2}\,\overline{(\delta u)^{2n - 2}} ^{1/2} \end{equation}

which yields

(2.12)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} \geq \zeta_2 + \zeta_{2n - 2} \end{equation}

if one considers the left-hand side of (1.5), and

(2.13)\begin{equation} 2\zeta _n \leq \zeta_2 + \zeta_{2n - 2} \end{equation}

if one considers the right-hand side of (1.5). As above, since (2.12) and (2.13) hold simultaneously, we have

(2.14)\begin{equation} 2\zeta _n = \zeta_2 + \zeta_{2n - 2}. \end{equation}

Using (2.10), we can write (2.14) as

(2.15)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} = {\zeta_2} + 2{\zeta_{n - 1}}. \end{equation}

Applying again the CS inequality to $\overline {(\delta u)^{n - 1}} = \overline {(\delta u)(\delta u)^{n - 2}}$ yields

(2.16)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _{n - 1}}={\zeta_2} + {\zeta_{2n - 4}}. \end{equation}

Combining (2.15) and (2.16), we obtain

(2.17)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} = 2{\zeta_2} + {\zeta_{2n - 4}}. \end{equation}

Taking $n=3$ and noting that $\zeta _3= 1$ (Kolmogorov Reference Kolmogorov1941b), (2.17) leads to

(2.18)\begin{equation} \zeta_{2} = \frac{2}{3}. \end{equation}

Finally, combining (2.5), (2.10) and (2.18) yields

(2.19)\begin{equation} \zeta_{n} = \frac{n}{3}. \end{equation}

This result may not be surprising since the CS inequality is a special case of the Hölder inequality, which led to (2.5) and which is satisfied by $\zeta _n=n/3$. We can, in fact, expect to obtain (2.5) from the CS inequality. This can be shown by applying a recursive process $n$ times to (2.15) as follows:

(2.20)\begin{equation} 2{\zeta _n} = \zeta_2 + 2\zeta_{n - 1} = \zeta_2 + \zeta_2+ 2\zeta_{n - 2} = \cdots= n\zeta_2, \end{equation}

where we used $\zeta _0 = 0$. Now using (2.10) to replace $2\zeta _n$ by $\zeta _{2n}$, (2.5) is obtained.

It is important to stress that in this section we treat (1.4) as a simple ‘mathematical’ function, regardless of any phenomenology used to derive it, or its physical meaning. Accordingly, the results of this section are purely mathematical. For example, the results indicate that the relation (1.9) for $\zeta _n$ fails to comply with the plausibility constraints. It is only when a physical meaning is attributed to (1.4) that one can draw some conclusions on the phenomenology used to derive the prediction (1.9). In the present case, the results show that the relation (1.9) developed under multifractal arguments is not plausible. On the other hand, the relation $\zeta _n=n/3$ complies with the plausibility test, suggesting that the K41 phenomenology is plausible.

3. Discussion

When one attaches a physical meaning to (1.4) and considers the theoretical phenomenology used to derive it, the result $\zeta _n=n/3$ obtained in § 2 is somewhat unexpected and conflicts with the dominant view that $\zeta _n=n/3+\alpha _n$. Indeed, the starting point of the determination of $\zeta _n$ is the expression $\overline {(\delta u)^{n}} \sim u_0^n (r/L)^{\zeta _{n}}$ as obtained via K62 or intermittency models, which predict $\zeta _n=n/3+\alpha _n$. It is important to re-emphasize that since the analysis in § 2 is purely mathematical, its outcome is independent of the phenomenology used to derive (1.4). We nevertheless recall that K62 attempts to account for the effect of the intermittency of $\epsilon$ in the inertial range, and multifractal models have been proposed to explain the so-called anomalous scaling of $\zeta _n$, i.e. the deviation of $\zeta _n$ from $n/3$ observed in experimental and numerical data (Anselmet et al. Reference Anselmet, Gagne, Hopfinger and Antonia1984; Frisch Reference Frisch1995; Sreenivasan & Antonia Reference Sreenivasan and Antonia1997; Sreenivasan & Dhruva Reference Sreenivasan and Dhruva1998; Anselmet, Antonia & Danaila Reference Anselmet, Antonia and Danaila2001; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Dhruva, Kurien, Sreenivasan and Taylor2005; Iyer, Sreenivasan & Yeung Reference Iyer, Sreenivasan and Yeung2020); the multifractal prediction (1.9) quantifies this deviation. The anomalous scaling is generally attributed to the intermittency of $\epsilon$ in the inertial range. The intermittency in the inertial range is certainly real, as illustrated by the fact that the skewness of $\delta u$ is not zero, and according to K62 leads to (1.4), i.e. the starting point of the present analysis. In light of this, the finding $\zeta _n=n/3$ would indicate that the intermittency of $\epsilon$ does not necessarily invalidate the 1941 theory of K41, which is at odds with the arguments that led to the relation (1.9). We cannot explain why the K62 prediction for $\zeta _n$ and the relation (1.9) do not comply with the constraints (2.4). We can only provide a few comments. In the multifractal framework, (1.9) is independent of the way the flow is produced. This requires the Reynolds number to be large enough for the effect of the large-scale motion to be negligible in the inertial range. Unless this requirement is truly satisfied, it is difficult to test the multifractal models and K62 (or K41 for that matter) since both experimental and numerical data will be affected by the Reynolds number effect (Antonia & Burattini Reference Antonia and Burattini2006; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Zhou2019). A key assumption in determining the exponent $\zeta _n$ from experimental and numerical data is that one can fit a power-law form, such as (1.1), over a range of scales where the effects of viscosity and the large-scale motion are negligible. This requires a large enough Reynolds number so that both $r/\eta \gg 1$ and $r/L \ll 1$ are satisfied in this range of scales, i.e. the inertial range; an inertial range where $r/L \ll 1$ has yet to be achieved in experiments and direct numerical simulations. If these conditions are satisfied, then the Kármán–Howarth equation (Kármán & Howarth Reference Kármán and Howarth1938) leads to the $4/5$-law or $\overline {(\delta u)^{3}} = -(4/5) u_0^3C_\epsilon (r/L)$, as expressed in terms of $u_0$ and $L$. This means that only when this law is observed can one expect $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$ to follow (1.4) in the inertial range. Unfortunately, as noted earlier (Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Zhou2019), this $4/5$-law is yet to be observed convincingly in the literature, although the data indicate that it is approached as the Reynolds number increases. Accordingly, the determination of $\zeta _n$ from experimental and numerical data is inevitably hindered by the Reynolds number effect.

Let us now assess the implication of the results of § 2 for the ratio $S_n$ defined as

(3.1)\begin{equation} S_n(r) = \left|\frac{\overline{(\delta u)^n}}{\overline{(\delta u)^2}^{n/2}}\right|. \end{equation}

Using (1.5), we then have

(3.2)\begin{equation} S_n(r) \sim \Bigg(\frac{r}{L}\Bigg)^{(\zeta_n-n\zeta_2/2)} \sim Re_\lambda^{\alpha} \Bigg(\frac{r}{\eta}\Bigg)^{(\zeta_n-n\zeta_2/2)}, \end{equation}

where $\alpha = \tfrac {3}{2}(n\zeta _2/2-\zeta _n)$. When $n=3$ and 4, $-S_3$ and $S_4$ are the skewness and flatness factor of $\delta u$, respectively. We have already established relation (2.20) (i.e. $2 \zeta _n=n\zeta _2$). Substituting this relation in (3.2) shows that $S_n(r)$ should be independent of both the Reynolds number and the increment $r$ in the inertial range, leaving $S_n$ as a non-zero constant. This is at variance with K62. Indeed, for example, when $n=3$, K62 predicts $S_3(r) \sim (r/L)^{-3\mu /2}$, where $\mu$ is a small positive number (recall that $r \ll L$), implying that $S_3(r)$, and consequently the intermittency, are functions of $r$ in the inertial range. Let us examine the behaviour of (3.2) in the inertial range. To do that, we arbitrarily set $r = \lambda$ (this value of $r$ should adequately satisfy the inertial range requirement – in fact, any value of $r$ in the inertial range will lead to the same result) in (3.2), and noting that $\lambda /\eta \sim Re_\lambda ^{1/2}$, we obtain

(3.3)\begin{equation} S_n (r= \lambda) \sim Re_\lambda^{(n\zeta_2/2 - \zeta_n)}. \end{equation}

Unless $n\zeta _2/2 - \zeta _n = 0$, (3.3) indicates that $S_n(r = \lambda )$ either increases without bound (if $\zeta _n < n\zeta _2/2$) or decreases to zero (if $\zeta _n > n\zeta _2/2$) with increasing $Re_\lambda$. However, neither behaviour seems realistic. Let us take $n=3$. It is difficult to imagine that $S_3(r)$ can increase without bound with $Re_\lambda$ in the inertial range, while $S_3(r) \rightarrow 0$ as $r/L \rightarrow 1$. On the other hand, a decrease of $S_3(r)$ as $Re_\lambda$ increases would indicate an unrealistic weakening of the intermittency with increasing $Re_\lambda$ in the inertial range. The available data for $S_3$ examined by Antonia et al. (Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Danaila2015) (see figure 9 in their paper) indicate that $S_3(r)$ slowly approaches a constant over the range $\eta < r < L$ as $Re_\lambda$ increases.

In light of the above, it is worthwhile assessing the behaviour of the moments of the longitudinal velocity gradient, denoted $S_{n,u_x}$; the subscript $u_x$ stands for the longitudinal velocity gradient $\partial u/\partial x$. These moments can be obtained by applying the limit $r \rightarrow 0$ to (3.1). Multifractal arguments show that $S_{n,u_x}$ increases with $Re_\lambda$, that is,

(3.4)\begin{equation} S_{n,u_x} \sim Re_\lambda^{\xi_n}, \end{equation}

with $\xi _n >0$. Independently of the various arguments used to arrive at (3.4), as well as of the different expressions for $\xi _n$, $S_{n,u_x}$ must be consistent with the Navier–Stokes equations. To assess this consistency, we once again take $n=3$. Starting with the Kármán–Howarth equation, we can obtain the following expression for $S_{3,u_x}$ when $r \rightarrow 0$ (Djenidi et al. Reference Djenidi, Antonia and Tang2019):

(3.5)\begin{equation} -S_{3,u_x}= 2 \times 15^{3/2}\beta_K - \frac{60}{7}\,\frac{1}{Re_\lambda}, \end{equation}

where $\beta _K= 2G/Re_\lambda$; here, $G$ is the destruction coefficient of $\bar {\epsilon }$ (Batchelor & Townsend Reference Batchelor and Townsend1947). The second term on the right-hand side of (3.5) is associated with the effect of the large-scale motion. This relation, which must be satisfied in the same way as the $4/5$-law is satisfied in the inertial range, confirms the Reynolds number dependence of $S_{3,u_x}$ observed in experimental and numerical data. However, since Antonia et al. (Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Danaila2015) showed that $\beta _K$ approaches a constant as $Re_\lambda$ increases, the $Re_\lambda$ dependence of $S_{3,u_x}$ gradually vanishes as the Reynolds number increases, indicating that $-S_{3,u_x}$ cannot grow without bound (for further critical discussion on this issue, see Qian Reference Qian1994; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Danaila2015; Tang et al. Reference Tang, Antonia, Djenidi and Zhou2019). A similar observation can be made for the flatness factor $S_{4,u_x}$, which can be written as (Djenidi et al. Reference Djenidi, Antonia and Tang2019)

(3.6)\begin{equation} S_{4,u_x}={-}750 \left[\gamma_{1,K} - 4 \gamma_{2,K}\right] - \frac{100}{3}\,\frac{S_{3,u_x}}{Re_\lambda}, \end{equation}

where $\gamma _{1,K}$ and $\gamma _{2,K}$ are constants when $Re_\lambda$ is sufficiently large; the second term on the right-hand side of (3.6) is associated with the effect of the large-scale motion. Expressions (3.5) and (3.6) derived from the Navier–Stokes equations are in conflict with (3.4) unless $\xi _n =0$.

It is instructive to examine how the multifractal model – or indeed other types of model – leads to (3.4). Essentially, the restriction that $r$ should be in the inertial range is relaxed, and the limit $r \rightarrow 0$ is allowed. For example, Nelkin (Reference Nelkin1990) simply extrapolates the multifractal description of the inertial range down to the dissipative range; Frisch (Reference Frisch1995) followed the same approach. This approach (see also, for example, Wyngaard & Tennekes Reference Wyngaard and Tennekes1970; Frisch, Sulem & Nelkin Reference Frisch, Sulem and Nelkin1978; Van Atta & Antonia Reference Van Atta and Antonia1980; Monin & Yaglom Reference Monin and Yaglom2007) is inappropriate since the viscosity, which is a controlling parameter in the dissipative range, is assumed to have no influence in the inertial range. In fact, Nelkin (Reference Nelkin1990) acknowledges that this ‘brute-force’ extension of the multifractal picture to the very small scales need not be correct. In that respect, Nelkin (Reference Nelkin1990) remarked that Kraichnan (Reference Kraichnan1990) proposed a model in which nearly exponential tails in the p.d.f. of the velocity derivative exist without recourse to multifractalisms, and for which $S_{3,u_x}$ and $S_{4,u_x}$ are independent of the Reynolds number. One should also point out that using a non-Gaussian p.d.f. of $\delta u$ with stretched exponential tails, together with a ‘quasi-closure’ scheme, Qian (Reference Qian1998, Reference Qian2000, Reference Qian2001) showed that the resulting scaling exponents favoured the K41 theory over the K62 theory.

4. Concluding remarks

We have formulated the mathematical constraints on the exponents $\zeta _n$ that have been predicted by K41 and various intermittency models. In order to do this, the Hölder inequality has been applied to the identity (1.5). This method is independent of any phenomenology that underpins (1.4) and yields mathematical conditions, which have been referred to as plausibility constraints. The latter are independent of the types of arguments used previously in developing intermittency models that predict $\zeta _n$. Any plausible prediction for $\zeta _n$ must comply with these constraints. Thus any prediction for $\zeta _n$ that fails this plausibility test should result in the abandonment of the corresponding model. In that regard, we found that predictions for $\zeta _n$ based on K62 or multifractal arguments and the empirically determined values of $\zeta _n$ reported in the literature are implausible. Of course, all models yield the correct value of $\zeta _n$ when $n=3$ (i.e. $\zeta _3=1$) since they are developed to satisfy the constraint imposed by the $4/5$-law. The relation $\zeta _n =n/3$, as given by K41, satisfies the plausibility test for all $n$. It should be stressed that the present results do not exclude the phenomenon of intermittency since the analysis is performed on (1.4), whose derivation is based on the phenomenology of the intermittency of small-scale turbulence. Although relation (1.4) has yet to be derived from the equation of motion and thus has yet to be validated, its validity has nevertheless been assumed by supporters of K62. The present analysis assesses the exponents $\zeta _n$ only when (1.4) is assumed to exist and hold in the inertial range $\eta \ll r \ll L$ when $Re_L \rightarrow \infty$. In that regard, the results provide only a set of mathematical constraints for $\zeta _n$ to comply with, and do not offer any direct insight into the small-scale turbulence phenomenology. For example, they show that while the intermittency of $\epsilon$ is compatible with the plausible relation $\zeta _n=n/3$, the prediction $\zeta _n=n/3 +\alpha _n$ is not plausible, unless $\alpha _n =0$.

We have also derived $\zeta _n =n/3$ by applying the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality to (1.5), thus confirming the compliance with the plausibility test. While $\zeta _n =n/3$ may appear controversial since it conflicts with the dominant view that $\zeta _n$ is ‘anomalous’, i.e. it deviates from $\zeta _n =n/3$ (see Benzi & Biferale (Reference Benzi and Biferale2015) for a relatively short review of work done in the last decades), it is nevertheless mathematically correct and therefore cannot be ignored or dismissed, in the same way that the $4/5$-law cannot be ignored when models for $\zeta _n$ are developed. The present results may raise an ‘apparent’ paradox, i.e. $\zeta _n =n/3$ even though the phenomenon of intermittency is believed to lead to (1.4) with $\zeta _n \neq n/3$ except for $n=3$. However, the paradox arises only when intermittency models are introduced to explain ‘pseudo-scaling exponents’ obtained at finite Reynolds numbers. These latter exponents, if they really exist, are not the exponents that pertain to the inertial range when $Re_\lambda \rightarrow \infty$. It should be recalled that the result $\zeta _n = n/3$ emerges from the constraints imposed on (1.4) when $Re_\lambda \rightarrow \infty$, the necessary and required condition for both K41 and K62. Further, when $\zeta _n = n/3$, (1.4) simply reflects K41; this does not ignore intermittency since, at least for $n=2$ and $n=3$, the Kármán–Howarth equation, which does not ignore intermittency, admits similarity based on either $(v_K, \eta )$ or $(u', L)$ when $Re_\lambda \rightarrow \infty$ (where $u'$ is the velocity r.m.s.). In summary, not only is intermittency not excluded from the present analysis, it is in fact not incompatible with $\zeta _n = n/3$. Accordingly, while one must not question the small-scale intermittency, one cannot nevertheless exclude the possibility that some of the arguments advanced in K62 – which played a major role in guiding subsequent intermittency models – may be flawed, thus leading to an incorrect prediction of $\zeta _n$. For example, a basic assumption of K62 is that the variance of $\epsilon$ increases without bound with the Reynolds number, while $\bar {\epsilon }$ remains bounded. This assumption has yet to be validated. Another critical aspect to be considered when assessing any phenomenology proposed to describe small-scale turbulence is that the physical results derived from that phenomenology must be consistent with the Navier–Stokes equations.

The analysis and results reported in the present work apply to values of $\zeta _n$ that pertain to a well-established inertial range, i.e. when the effect of the Reynolds number and any influence from the large-scale motion have disappeared. While these results can also be used for assessing the values of $\zeta _n$ determined empirically from experimental and numerical simulation data, it should be stressed that the Reynolds number in experiments and numerical simulations is finite. There is strong evidence that these data are affected by the finite Reynolds number effect (Qian Reference Qian1997, Reference Qian1999, Reference Qian2000; Moisy, Tabeling & Willaime Reference Moisy, Tabeling and Willaime1999; Antonia & Burattini Reference Antonia and Burattini2006; McComb Reference McComb2014; McComb et al. Reference McComb, Yoffe, Linkmann and Berera2014; Tang et al. Reference Tang, Antonia, Djenidi, Danaila and Zhou2017; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Zhou2019). Qian (Reference Qian1997) was first to draw attention to the finite Reynolds number (FRN) effect. As already mentioned above, Qian (Reference Qian1998) used a non-Gaussian model for the p.d.f. of $|\delta u|$ to show that the anomalous scaling observed in experiments is an FRN effect, and that normal scaling is valid in the inertial range when $Re_\lambda \rightarrow \infty$. This effect has since been scrutinized fairly comprehensively (e.g. Antonia & Burattini Reference Antonia and Burattini2006; Tang et al. Reference Tang, Antonia, Djenidi, Danaila and Zhou2017; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Tang, Djenidi and Zhou2019). The present results vindicate the concerns expressed previously in the literature with regard to the FRN effect on the magnitude of ‘pseudo-scaling exponents’. Interestingly, the present results are consistent with Lundgren's derivation (Lundgren Reference Lundgren2002) of $\overline {(\delta u)^2}\sim r^{2/3}$, which applied a method of matched asymptotic expansions to the Kármán–Howarth equation (Kármán & Howarth Reference Kármán and Howarth1938) when $Re_\lambda$ is infinitely large. His result supports the argument that the departure from K41 or ‘anomalous’ behaviour observed at finite Reynolds number disappears at infinitely large Reynolds number.

The present results may be perceived to be at odds with those for Burgers turbulence or for a passive scalar advected by HIT. We note that the present power-law exponent ($\zeta _n = n/3)$ differs from that in Burgers turbulence i.e. $\zeta _n=n$ for $n<1$, and $\zeta _n=1$ for $n>1$ (Bouchaud, Mézard & Parisi Reference Bouchaud, Mézard and Parisi1995; Frisch Reference Frisch1995; Friedrich et al. Reference Friedrich, Margazoglou, Biferale and Grauer2018). However, caution is required when comparing Burgers turbulence and three-dimensional HIT. Indeed, it is well established that the results from the Burgers equation differ from results usually expected for turbulent flow fields. This may not be too surprising since the Burgers equation not only does not include a pressure term but lacks an important property attributed to turbulence: the solutions do not exhibit chaotic features that are sensitive to initial conditions (Bec & Khanin Reference Bec and Khanin2007). Further, it is worth quoting Frisch (Reference Frisch1995) in connection to the Burgers equation: ‘We shall not here open the Pandora's box of Burgers equation how it does (and often does not) relate to the turbulence problem’.

Regarding the passive scalar structure functions, if one assumes that $\overline {(\delta \phi )^n} \sim (r/L)^{\alpha _n}$ holds in the inertial-convective range (Van Atta Reference Van Atta1971; Antonia et al. Reference Antonia, Hopfinger, Gagne and Anselmet1984) (as far as we are aware, a rigorous derivation of the power-law form for $\overline {(\delta \phi )^n}$ that does not introduce assumptions in the scalar transport equation does not exist), then applying the same analysis as reported in § 2 would lead to a similar result: $\alpha = n/3$. To obtain it, all that is required is to carry out the change of variables $L = C_\epsilon ^{1/4}\,Re_L^{3/4} \eta$. This leads to an identity for $\overline {(\delta \phi )^n}$ similar to the identity (1.5). Also, the transport equation of the turbulent kinetic energy structure function ($\overline {(\delta q^2)} = \overline {(\delta u)^2} +\overline {(\delta v)^2} +\overline {(\delta w)^2}$) is similar to that of any scalar $\phi$ (e.g. Djenidi, Antonia & Tang Reference Djenidi, Antonia and Tang2022). When the Prandtl number or Schmidt number is 1, there is a ‘perfect’ analogy between $\overline {(\delta q^2)}$ and $\overline {(\delta \phi )^2}$. In that case, one should expect $\overline {(\delta \phi )^2}$ to behave like $\overline {(\delta q^2)}$, which according to our results should be $\overline {(\delta \phi )^2} \sim r^{2/3}$ in the inertial-convective range. The mixed velocity-scalar structure function -$\overline {\delta u (\delta \phi )^2}$ behaves like $r$, which can be derived easily when the molecular diffusion and the large-scale terms are dropped from the transport equation of $\overline {(\delta \phi )^2}$. As in the case of the velocity field, the intermittency of $\epsilon _\phi$ is not incompatible with this $2/3$-law for the passive scalar. The intermittency of $\epsilon _\phi$ is fully compatible with the $4/3$-law $\overline {(\delta u)(\delta \phi )^2} = -(4/3) \epsilon _\phi r$ derived from the transport equation for $\overline {(\delta \phi ^2)}$ in the inertial-convective range (Yaglom Reference Yaglom1949). Further, Danaila, Antonia & Burattini (Reference Danaila, Antonia and Burattini2012) presented evidence that suggests that, at the same $Re_\lambda$, the scalar variance transfer is closer to the asymptotic value of $4/3$ than its kinetic energy counterpart. On the basis of this evidence and of the relative behaviours of the $u$ and $\theta$ spectra (Danaila & Antonia Reference Danaila and Antonia2009), one could in fact argue that the scalar field is ‘less’ anomalous than the velocity field. Such an argument could, however, be fallacious, partly because the statistics of $u$ and $\theta$ are not directly comparable, and also because the finite Reynolds number effect needs to be fully accounted for.

Funding

S.L.T. wishes to acknowledge the financial support of NSFC through grant 91952109 and the Research Grants Council of Shenzhen Government through grant RCYX20210706092046085.

Declaration of interests

The authors report no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Plausible derivation of a power law for $\overline {(\delta u)^{n}}$

We begin our derivation by assuming a dual scaling where $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$ scales with both $(u_0, L)$ and $(v_K, \eta )$ in the inertial range $\eta \ll r \ll L$ as $Re_L \rightarrow \infty$, which leads to

(A1)\begin{equation} \overline{(\delta u)^n} = u_0^n\,f_n(r^+) =v_K^n\,g_n(r^*), \end{equation}

where $r^+=r/L$, $r^*= r/\eta$, and $f_n$ and $g_n$ are functions independent of the Reynolds number to be determined. Taking the derivative of (A1) with respect to $r$ yields

(A2)\begin{equation} \frac{\partial \overline{(\delta u)^{n}}}{\partial r} = v_K^n\,\frac{\partial g_n(r^*)}{\partial r}=u_0^n\,\frac{\partial f_n(r^+)}{\partial r}. \end{equation}

Using the variable change $r=r^*\eta = r^+L$, we obtain

(A3)\begin{equation} \frac{v_K^n}{\eta}\,\frac{\partial g_n(r^*)}{\partial r^*}=\frac{u_0^n}{L}\,\frac{\partial f_n(r^+)}{\partial r^+}. \end{equation}

We now multiply both sides of (A3) by $r$, and rearrange terms to obtain

(A4)\begin{equation} r^*\,\frac{\partial g_n(r^*)}{\partial r^*}=r^+\,\frac{u_0^n}{v_K^n}\,\frac{\partial f_n(r^+)}{\partial r^+}. \end{equation}

Using (A1) in (A4), we arrive at

(A5)\begin{equation} \frac{r^*}{g_n(r^*)}\,\frac{\partial g_n(r^*)}{\partial r^*}=\frac{r^+}{f_n(r^+)}\,\frac{\partial f_n(r^+)}{\partial r^+}. \end{equation}

Since in the inertial range $\eta /L \rightarrow 0$, we can treat $r^*$ and $r^+$ as independent variables, which implies that each side of (A5) is a constant; we denote that constant by $\zeta _n$. Integrating each side of (A5) yields the solutions

(A6)\begin{equation} g_n(r^*)= B_n r^{*\zeta_n} \end{equation}

and

(A7)\begin{equation} f_n(r^+)= C_n r^{+\zeta_n}, \end{equation}

where $B_n$ and $C_n$ are constants of integration.

Interestingly, if $u_0^n\,f_n(r^+)$ and $v_K^n g_n(r^*)$ are interpreted as the outer and inner expressions for $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$ when $r^+ \rightarrow 0$ and $r^* \rightarrow \infty$, respectively, then (A1) indicates that there exists a range of scales, the inertial range, where both solutions overlap. In that respect, the above derivation of (1.1) is, as already pointed out by Tennekes & Lumley (Reference Tennekes and Lumley1972) in the context of the spectrum of $u$, akin to the matching method used to derive the log law (or law of the wall) in a turbulent boundary layer or turbulent channel and pipe flows (Millikan Reference Millikan1939; Tennekes & Lumley Reference Tennekes and Lumley1972; Barenblatt & Goldenfeld Reference Barenblatt and Goldenfeld1995; McKeon & Morrison Reference McKeon and Morrison2007). It is also relevant to point out that Gamard & George (Reference Gamard and George2000) applied a matching method in the spectral domain using the same two scaling sets as considered here, and recovered, in the limit of infinitely large Reynolds number, the $-5/3$-law, i.e. $E(k) \sim k^{-5/3}$, where $E(k)$ is the three-dimensional energy spectrum, and $k$ is the three-dimensional wavenumber. Lundgren (Reference Lundgren2002) applied such a method to the Kármán–Howarth equation (Kármán & Howarth Reference Kármán and Howarth1938) to derive the $2/3$-law (1.2).

Some caution is warranted. The above derivation of (A6) and (A7) is based solely on the validity of the dual scaling $(u_0, L)$ and $(v_K, \eta )$ for $\overline {(\delta u)^n}$. We can only note that this dual scaling is consistent with $\zeta _n=n/3$.

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