Scaling laws of passive-scalar diffusion in the interstellar medium
Publication Date
2017-01-01Journal Title
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
ISSN
0035-8711
Volume
467
Issue
2
Pages
2421-2429
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
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Colbrook, M., Ma, X., Hopkins, P., & Squire, J. (2017). Scaling laws of passive-scalar diffusion in the interstellar medium. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 467 (2), 2421-2429. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx261
Abstract
Passive scalar mixing (metals, molecules, etc.) in the turbulent interstellar
medium (ISM) is critical for abundance patterns of stars and clusters, galaxy and star formation, and cooling from the circumgalactic medium. However, the fundamental scaling laws remain poorly understood in the highly supersonic, magnetized, shearing regime relevant for the ISM. We therefore study the full scaling laws governing passive-scalar transport in idealized simulations of supersonic turbulence. Using simple phenomenological arguments for the variation of diffusivity with scale based on Richardson diffusion, we propose a simple fractional diffusion equation to describe the turbulent advection of an initial passive scalar distribution. These predictions agree well with the measurements from simulations, and vary with turbulent Mach number in the expected manner, remaining valid even in the presence of a large-scale shear
flow (e.g. rotation in a galactic disk). The evolution of the scalar
distribution is not the same as obtained using simple, constant "effective
diffusivity" as in Smagorinsky models, because the scale-dependence of
turbulent transport means an initially Gaussian distribution quickly develops highly non-Gaussian tails. We also emphasize that these are mean scalings that only apply to ensemble behaviors (assuming many different, random scalar injection sites): individual Lagrangian "patches" remain coherent (poorly-mixed) and simply advect for a large number of turbulent flow-crossing times.
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx261
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/296041
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Publisher's own licence