Beyond optimal disturbances: a statistical framework for transient growth
The theory of transient growth describes how linear mechanisms can cause temporary amplification of disturbances even when the linearized system is asymptotically stable as defined by its eigenvalues. This growth is traditionally quantified by finding the initial disturbance that generates the maxim...
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Main Authors | , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
22.02.2023
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The theory of transient growth describes how linear mechanisms can cause
temporary amplification of disturbances even when the linearized system is
asymptotically stable as defined by its eigenvalues. This growth is
traditionally quantified by finding the initial disturbance that generates the
maximum response, in terms of energy gain, at the peak time of its evolution.
While this bounds the growth, it can vastly overstate the growth of a real
disturbance. In this paper, we introduce a statistical perspective on transient
growth that models statistics of the energy amplification of the disturbances.
We derive a formula for the mean energy amplification in terms of the two-point
spatial correlation of the initial disturbance. We also derive an accurate
approximation of the probability density function of the energy of the growing
disturbance, from which confidence bounds on the growth can be obtained.
Applying our analysis to Poisseuille flow yields a number of observations.
First, the mean gain can be drastically smaller than the maximum, especially
when the disturbances are broadband in wavenumber content. In these cases, it
is exceedingly unlikely to achieve near-optimal growth due to the exponential
behavior which we observe in the probability density function. Second, the
characteristic length scale of the initial disturbances has a significant
impact on the expected growth; specifically, large-scale initial disturbances
produce orders-of-magnitude-larger expected growth than smaller scales,
indicating that the length scale of incoming disturbances may be key in
determining whether transient growth leads to transition for a particular flow.
Finally, while the optimal growth scales quadratically with Reynolds number, we
observe that the mean energy amplification scales only linearly for certain
reasonable choices of the initial correlations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2302.11564 |