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Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves

We study decaying acoustic turbulence using numerical simulations of a relativistic fluid in two dimensions. Working in the limit of non-relativistic bulk velocities, with an ultra-relativistic equation of state, we find that the energy spectrum evolves towards a self-similar broken power law, with...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dahl, Jani, Hindmarsh, Mark, Rummukainen, Kari, Weir, David
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2798730
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author Dahl, Jani
Hindmarsh, Mark
Rummukainen, Kari
Weir, David
author_facet Dahl, Jani
Hindmarsh, Mark
Rummukainen, Kari
Weir, David
author_sort Dahl, Jani
collection CERN
description We study decaying acoustic turbulence using numerical simulations of a relativistic fluid in two dimensions. Working in the limit of non-relativistic bulk velocities, with an ultra-relativistic equation of state, we find that the energy spectrum evolves towards a self-similar broken power law, with a high-wavenumber behaviour of $k^{-2.08 \pm 0.08}$, cut off at very high $k$ by the inverse width of the shock waves, and with a low-$k$ power law of $k^{2.50 \pm 0.31}$. The evolution of the energy and the integral length scale can be fitted with simple functions of time, derived from the self-similarity of the flow. We find them to develop proportional to $t^{-1.21 \pm 0.06}$ and $t^{0.32 \pm 0.03}$ respectively at late times. The model for the decay can be extended to three dimensions using the universality of the high-$k$ power law and the evolution laws for the kinetic energy and the integral length scale, and is used to build an estimate for the gravitational wave power spectrum resulting from a collection of shock waves, as might be found in the aftermath of a strong first order phase transition in the early universe. The power spectrum has a peak wavenumber set by the initial length scale of the acoustic waves, and a new secondary scale at lower wavenumber set by the integral scale after a Hubble time. The behaviour with wavenumber $k$ is $k^{2\beta + 1}$ at low $k$, where $\beta$ denotes the low-$k$ power law of the fluid energy spectrum, changing to a shallower $k^{(3 \beta - 1)/2}$ at intermediate $k$, and $k^{-3}$ at high $k$. The intermediate power law appears when the flow is short-lived in comparison to the Hubble time.
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language eng
publishDate 2021
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spelling cern-27987302022-01-14T15:22:39Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2798730engDahl, JaniHindmarsh, MarkRummukainen, KariWeir, DavidDecay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational wavesphysics.flu-dynOther Fields of Physicshep-phParticle Physics - Phenomenologygr-qcGeneral Relativity and CosmologyWe study decaying acoustic turbulence using numerical simulations of a relativistic fluid in two dimensions. Working in the limit of non-relativistic bulk velocities, with an ultra-relativistic equation of state, we find that the energy spectrum evolves towards a self-similar broken power law, with a high-wavenumber behaviour of $k^{-2.08 \pm 0.08}$, cut off at very high $k$ by the inverse width of the shock waves, and with a low-$k$ power law of $k^{2.50 \pm 0.31}$. The evolution of the energy and the integral length scale can be fitted with simple functions of time, derived from the self-similarity of the flow. We find them to develop proportional to $t^{-1.21 \pm 0.06}$ and $t^{0.32 \pm 0.03}$ respectively at late times. The model for the decay can be extended to three dimensions using the universality of the high-$k$ power law and the evolution laws for the kinetic energy and the integral length scale, and is used to build an estimate for the gravitational wave power spectrum resulting from a collection of shock waves, as might be found in the aftermath of a strong first order phase transition in the early universe. The power spectrum has a peak wavenumber set by the initial length scale of the acoustic waves, and a new secondary scale at lower wavenumber set by the integral scale after a Hubble time. The behaviour with wavenumber $k$ is $k^{2\beta + 1}$ at low $k$, where $\beta$ denotes the low-$k$ power law of the fluid energy spectrum, changing to a shallower $k^{(3 \beta - 1)/2}$ at intermediate $k$, and $k^{-3}$ at high $k$. The intermediate power law appears when the flow is short-lived in comparison to the Hubble time.arXiv:2112.12013HIP-2021-29/THoai:cds.cern.ch:27987302021-12-19
spellingShingle physics.flu-dyn
Other Fields of Physics
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
gr-qc
General Relativity and Cosmology
Dahl, Jani
Hindmarsh, Mark
Rummukainen, Kari
Weir, David
Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title_full Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title_fullStr Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title_full_unstemmed Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title_short Decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
title_sort decay of acoustic turbulence in two dimensions and implications for cosmological gravitational waves
topic physics.flu-dyn
Other Fields of Physics
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
gr-qc
General Relativity and Cosmology
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2798730
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AT rummukainenkari decayofacousticturbulenceintwodimensionsandimplicationsforcosmologicalgravitationalwaves
AT weirdavid decayofacousticturbulenceintwodimensionsandimplicationsforcosmologicalgravitationalwaves