Exploring regular, exotic and turbulent flow states in active fluids via the framework of Exact Coherent Structures

ORAL

Abstract

Active fluids in biological and artificial systems are governed by fully nonequilibrium dynamics, and their emergent spatiotemporal structures span multiple scales. The dominant flow patterns of such systems can be understood in a systematic manner in terms of Exact Coherent Structures (ECS) and the dynamical pathways connecting them. An ECS is a (stable or unstable) equilibrium, time-periodic, relative time-periodic, quasi-periodic or traveling wave solution of the governing equations, while their invariant manifolds form the connecting pathways between different ECS. The ECS framework enables a fully nonlinear but highly reduced-order description in terms of a directed graph. We provide a unified study of stable and unstable coherent states of 2D active nematic channel flow using the framework of ECS. We compute more than 150 unstable ECS that co-exist at a single set of parameters in the weakly `active turbulent' regime. Using the reduced representation, we compute instantaneous perturbations that switch the system between disparate spatiotemporal states occupying distant regions of the infinite-dimensional phase space. By comparing with simulations in the active turbulence regime, we also provide numerical evidence of a chaotic trajectory shadowing various ECSs.

*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under award number DE-SC0022280. This work was completed utilizing the Holland Computing Center of the University of Nebraska, which receives support from the Nebraska Research Initiative.

Publication: Wagner, Caleb G., et al. "Exact Coherent Structures and Phase Space Geometry of Preturbulent 2D Active Nematic Channel Flow." Physical Review Letters 128.2 (2022): 028003.

Presenters

  • Rumayel H Pallock

    • University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Authors

  • Piyush Grover

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln
  • Rumayel H Pallock

    • University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Michael M Norton

    • Rochester Institute of Technology
  • Caleb Wagner

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln
  • Jae Sung Park

    • University of Nebraska–Lincoln