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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Cossu is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Cossu.


Physics of Fluids | 2004

Experimental and theoretical investigation of the nonmodal growth of steady streaks in a flat plate boundary layer

Jens H. M. Fransson; Luca Brandt; Alessandro Talamelli; Carlo Cossu

An experimental and theoretical investigation aimed at describing the nonmodal growth of steady and spanwise periodic streamwise streaks in a flat plate boundary layer is presented. Stable laminar streaks are experimentally generated by means of a spanwise periodic array of small cylindrical roughness elements fixed on the plate. The streamwise evolution of the streaks is measured and it is proved that, except in a small region near the roughness elements, they obey the boundary layer scalings. The maximum achievable amplitude is mainly determined by the relative height of the roughness elements. Results are compared with numerical simulations of optimal and suboptimal boundary layer streaks. The theory is able to elucidate some of the discrepancies recently noticed between experimentally realizable nonmodal growth and optimal perturbation theory. The key factor is found to be the wall normal location and the extension of the laminar standing streamwise vortices inducing the streaks. The differences among previous experimental works can be explained by different dominating streak generation mechanisms which can be linked to the geometry and to the ratio between the roughness height and the boundary layer scale.


Physics of Fluids | 2002

Stabilization of Tollmien-Schlichting waves by finite amplitude optimal streaks in the Blasius boundary layer

Carlo Cossu; Luca Brandt

In this Letter we show by numerical simulation that streamwise streaks of sufficiently large amplitude are able to stabilize Tollmien–Schlichting waves in zero pressure gradient boundary layers at least up to Re=1000. This stabilization is due to the spanwise averaged part of the nonlinear basic flow distortion induced by the streaks and occurs for streak amplitudes lower than the critical threshold beyond which secondary inflectional instability is observed. A new control strategy is implemented using optimal perturbations in order to generate the streaks.


Physics of Fluids | 2005

Experimental study of the stabilization of Tollmien–Schlichting waves by finite amplitude streaks

Jens H. M. Fransson; Luca Brandt; Alessandro Talamelli; Carlo Cossu

It has recently been found by using temporal and spatial numerical simulations that steady optimal streaks of moderate amplitude, i.e., sufficiently large but not exceeding the critical amplitude for the inflectional instability, are able to reduce the growth of Tollmien-Schlichting (TS) waves up to their complete suppression. This investigation aims at experimentally verifying this stabilizing effect by generating stable and symmetric, close to sinusoidal, streaks of moderate amplitudes (similar to 12% of the free-stream velocity) by means of a spanwise array of cylindrical roughness elements. The three-dimensional (3D) streaky base flow is then subjected to a secondary instability generated through a spanwise slot in the plate by means of regulated blowing and suction. In this study the stabilizing role of the streaks on TS waves is unambiguously confirmed and by increasing the height of the roughness elements, thus inducing larger amplitude streaks, we are also able to show that the stabilizing action on the TS waves increases with the streak amplitude. These results are the first to confirm the numerical predictions reported in earlier works. The full cross-stream plane has been measured at different downstream positions allowing a complete evaluation and comparison of the different amplitude measures used in previous experimental works. Furthermore, theoretical impulse response analysis and stability calculations are applied to the present experimental streaky base flow enabling a qualitative comparison of the 3D modulated TS wave distribution.


Physics of Fluids | 2009

A note on optimal transient growth in turbulent channel flows

Gregory Pujals; Manuel García-Villalba; Carlo Cossu; Sebastien Depardon

We compute the optimal transient growth of perturbations sustained by a turbulent channel flow following the same approach recently used by del Alamo and Jimenez [J. Fluid Mech. 559, 205 (2006)]. Contrary to this previous analysis, we use generalized Orr–Sommerfeld and Squire operators consistent with previous investigations of mean flows with variable viscosity. The optimal perturbations are streamwise vortices evolving into streamwise streaks. In accordance with del Alamo and Jimenez, it is found that for very elongated structures and for sufficiently large Reynolds numbers, the optimal energy growth presents a primary peak in the spanwise wavelength, scaling in outer units, and a secondary peak scaling in inner units and corresponding to λz+≈100. Contrary to the previous results, however, it is found that the maximum energy growth associated with the primary peak increases with the Reynolds number. This growth, in a first approximation, scales linearly with an effective Reynolds number based on the cen...


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2010

Amplification of coherent streaks in the turbulent Couette flow: an input-output analysis at low Reynolds number

Yongyun Hwang; Carlo Cossu

We compute the optimal response of the turbulent Couette mean flow to initial conditions, harmonic and stochastic forcing at Re = 750. The equations for the coherent perturbations are linearized near the turbulent mean flow and include the associated eddy viscosity. The mean flow is found to be linearly stable but it has the potential to amplify steamwise streaks from streamwise vortices. The most amplified structures are streamwise uniform and the largest amplifications of the energy of initial conditions and of the variance of stochastic forcing are realized by large-scale streaks having spanwise wavelengths of 4.4 h and 5.2 h respectively. These spanwise scales compare well with the ones of the coherent large-scale streaks observed in experimental realizations and direct numerical simulations of the turbulent Couette flow. The optimal response to the harmonic forcing, related to the sensitivity to boundary conditions and artificial forcing, can be very large and is obtained with steady forcing of structures with larger spanwise wavelength (7.7 h ). The optimal large-scale streaks are furthermore found proportional to the mean turbulent profile in the viscous sublayer and up to the buffer layer.


Physics of Fluids | 2005

A note on the stability of slip channel flows

Eric Lauga; Carlo Cossu

We consider the influence of slip boundary conditions on the modal and nonmodal stability of pressure-driven channel flows. In accordance with previous results by Gersting [“Hydrodynamic stability of plane porous slip flow,” Phys. Fluids 17, 2126 (1974)] but in contradiction with the recent investigation of Chu [“Instability of Navier slip flow of liquids,” C. R. Mec. 332, 895 (2004)], we show that the slip increases significantly the value of the critical Reynolds number for linear instability. The nonmodal stability analysis, however, reveals that slip has a very weak influence on the maximum transient energy growth of perturbations at subcritical Reynolds numbers. Slip boundary conditions are therefore not likely to have a significant effect on the transition to turbulence in channel flows.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Self-sustained process at large scales in turbulent channel flow.

Yongyun Hwang; Carlo Cossu

Large-scale motions, important in turbulent shear flows, are frequently attributed to the interaction of structures at smaller scales. Here we show that, in a turbulent channel at Re{τ}≈550, large-scale motions can self-sustain even when smaller-scale structures populating the near-wall and logarithmic regions are artificially quenched. This large-scale self-sustained mechanism is not active in periodic boxes of width smaller than L{z}≈1.5h or length shorter than L{x}≈3h which correspond well to the most energetic large scales observed in the turbulent channel.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2013

Global bifurcations to subcritical magnetorotational dynamo action in Keplerian shear flow

Antoine Riols; F. Rincon; Carlo Cossu; Geoffroy Lesur; Pierre-Yves Longaretti; Gordon I. Ogilvie; Johann Herault

Magnetorotational dynamo action in Keplerian shear flow is a three-dimensional, non-linear magnetohydrodynamic process whose study is relevant to the understanding of accretion processes and magnetic field generation in astrophysics. Transition to this form of dynamo action is subcritical and shares many characteristics of transition to turbulence in non-rotating hydrodynamic shear flows. This suggests that these different fluid systems become active through similar generic bifurcation mechanisms, which in both cases have eluded detailed understanding so far. In this paper, we build on recent work on the two problems to investigate numerically the bifurcation mechanisms at work in the incompressible Keplerian magnetorotational dynamo problem in the shearing box framework. Using numerical techniques imported from dynamical systems research, we show that the onset of chaotic dynamo action at magnetic Prandtl numbers larger than unity is primarily associated with global homoclinic and heteroclinic bifurcations of nonlinear magnetorotational dynamo cycles. These global bifurcations are found to be supplemented by local bifurcations of cycles marking the beginning of period-doubling cascades. The results suggest that nonlinear magnetorotational dynamo cycles provide the pathway to turbulent injection of both kinetic and magnetic energy in incompressible magnetohydrodynamic Keplerian shear flow in the absence of an externally imposed magnetic field. Studying the nonlinear physics and bifurcations of these cycles in different regimes and configurations may subsequently help to better understand the physical conditions of excitation of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence and instability-driven dynamos in a variety of astrophysical systems and laboratory experiments. The detailed characterization of global bifurcations provided for this three-dimensional subcritical fluid dynamics problem may also prove useful for the problem of transition to turbulence in hydrodynamic shear flows.


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2010

Linear non-normal energy amplification of harmonic and stochastic forcing in the turbulent channel flow

Yongyun Hwang; Carlo Cossu

The linear response to stochastic and optimal harmonic forcing of small coherent perturbations to the turbulent channel mean flow is computed for Reynolds numbers ranging from Re_tau=500 to Re_tau=20000. Even though the turbulent mean flow is linearly stable, it is nevertheless able to sustain large amplifications by the forcing. The most amplified structures consist of streamwise elongated streaks that are optimally forced by streamwise elongated vortices. For streamwise elongated structures, the mean energy amplification of the stochastic forcing is found to be, to a first approximation, inversely proportional to the forced spanwise wavenumber while it is inversely proportional to its square for optimal harmonic forcing in an intermediate spanwise wavenumber range. This scaling can be explicitly derived from the linearised equations under the assumptions of geometric similarity of the coherent perturbations and of logarithmic base flow. Deviations from this approximate power-law regime are apparent in the premultiplied energy amplification curves that reveal a strong influence of two different peaks. The dominant peak scales in outer units with the most amplified spanwise wavelength of


Physical Review E | 2011

Periodic magnetorotational dynamo action as a prototype of nonlinear magnetic-field generation in shear flows.

Johann Herault; F. Rincon; Carlo Cossu; Geoffroy Lesur; Gordon I. Ogilvie; Pierre-Yves Longaretti

\lambda_z \approx 3.5 h

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Jens H. M. Fransson

Royal Institute of Technology

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F. Rincon

University of Toulouse

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Dan S. Henningson

Royal Institute of Technology

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