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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
January
Turbulence yields secrets
to 73-year-old experiment
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
1/31/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| From
left, Nigel Goldenfeld, physics professor; Pinaki
Chakraborty, graduate student; and
Gustavo Gioia, professor of theoretical and applied
mechanics, have explained a 73-year-old mystery
in physics.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— A simple but groundbreaking experiment performed more than 70
years ago finally has been explained by scientists at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The solution sheds new light on fluid
turbulence – the last major unsolved problem in classical physics.
“Turbulence is the jittery, swirling behavior of a gas or liquid
when flowing next to a wall or around an obstacle,” said Gustavo
Gioia, a professor of theoretical
and applied mechanics at Illinois. “Although most of the flows
that surround us in everyday life are turbulent flows over rough walls,
these flows have remained one of the least understood phenomena of classical
physics.”
In 1933, Johann Nikuradse carefully measured the friction a fluid experiences
as it is forced through a pipe at varying speeds. Nikuradse found that
the friction gets smaller as the speed gets larger, but then surprisingly
increases at high speeds before attaining a constant value.
This mysterious behavior, which must be taken into account by engineers
in applications ranging from airplanes to oil pipelines, has now been
explained.
In a paper to appear in the Feb. 3 issue of the journal Physical Review
Letters, Gioia and graduate student Pinaki Chakraborty show how this
behavior arises from fundamental properties of the way in which energy
is distributed among the swirling eddies that populate a turbulent flow.
“As a result of our theoretical explanation, engineers can now
calculate the friction force found along rough walls, rather than rely
upon a chart or table based on the Nikuradse data,” Chakraborty
said.
In related work, to appear in the same issue of Physical Review Letters,
Illinois physics professor Nigel Goldenfeld shows how the behavior implies
that the turbulent state is not random, but contains subtle statistical
correlations that are similar to those known to exist at phase transitions,
such as the onset of magnetism in crystals.
“These findings suggest a new tack for theorists trying to understand
turbulence,” Goldenfeld said. “The roughness of the pipe
walls is important and affects the flow in ways previously overlooked.”
The researchers hope that as a result of these discoveries, the approaches
that solved the problem of phase transitions will now find a new application
in providing a fundamental understanding of turbulence.
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
Editor’s note: To reach Gustavo Gioia, call 217-333-3173; e-mail:
ggioia@uiuc.edu.
To reach Nigel Goldenfeld, call 217-333-8027; e-mail: nigel@uiuc.edu.
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