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Dive into the research topics where Nazmi Burak Budanur is active.

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Featured researches published by Nazmi Burak Budanur.


Journal of Statistical Physics | 2017

Unstable Manifolds of Relative Periodic Orbits in the Symmetry-Reduced State Space of the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky System

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Predrag Cvitanović

Systems such as fluid flows in channels and pipes or the complex Ginzburg–Landau system, defined over periodic domains, exhibit both continuous symmetries, translational and rotational, as well as discrete symmetries under spatial reflections or complex conjugation. The simplest, and very common symmetry of this type is the equivariance of the defining equations under the orthogonal group O(2). We formulate a novel symmetry reduction scheme for such systems by combining the method of slices with invariant polynomial methods, and show how it works by applying it to the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky system in one spatial dimension. As an example, we track a relative periodic orbit through a sequence of bifurcations to the onset of chaos. Within the symmetry-reduced state space we are able to compute and visualize the unstable manifolds of relative periodic orbits, their torus bifurcations, a transition to chaos via torus breakdown, and heteroclinic connections between various relative periodic orbits. It would be very hard to carry through such analysis in the full state space, without a symmetry reduction such as the one we present here.


Nature Physics | 2018

Destabilizing turbulence in pipe flow

Jakob Kühnen; Baofang Song; Davide Scarselli; Nazmi Burak Budanur; Michael Riedl; Ashley P. Willis; Marc Avila; Björn Hof

Turbulence is the major cause of friction losses in transport processes and it is responsible for a drastic drag increase in flows over bounding surfaces. While much effort is invested into developing ways to control and reduce turbulence intensities1–3, so far no methods exist to altogether eliminate turbulence if velocities are sufficiently large. We demonstrate for pipe flow that appropriate distortions to the velocity profile lead to a complete collapse of turbulence and subsequently friction losses are reduced by as much as 90%. Counterintuitively, the return to laminar motion is accomplished by initially increasing turbulence intensities or by transiently amplifying wall shear. Since neither the Reynolds number nor the shear stresses decrease (the latter often increase), these measures are not indicative of turbulence collapse. Instead, an amplification mechanism4,5 measuring the interaction between eddies and the mean shear is found to set a threshold below which turbulence is suppressed beyond recovery.Turbulence in pipe flows causes substantial friction (and therefore economic) losses. An experimental and numerical study now shows a solution might be to initially enhance turbulent mixing, which subsequently leads to a collapse of turbulence.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Reduction of SO(2) Symmetry for Spatially Extended Dynamical Systems

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Predrag Cvitanović; Ruslan L. Davidchack; Evangelos Siminos


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2017

Relative periodic orbits form the backbone of turbulent pipe flow

Nazmi Burak Budanur; K. Y. Short; Mohammad Farazmand; Ashley P. Willis; Predrag Cvitanović


Chaos | 2015

Periodic orbit analysis of a system with continuous symmetry--A tutorial.

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Daniel Borrero-Echeverry; Predrag Cvitanović


Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2017

Heteroclinic path to spatially localized chaos in pipe flow

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Björn Hof


Archive | 2015

Exact coherent structures in spatiotemporal chaos: From qualitative description to quantitative predictions

Nazmi Burak Budanur


Physics | 2017

Searching for Order in Turbulent Flow

Björn Hof; Nazmi Burak Budanur


arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018

Geometry of the transient chaos in streamwise-localized pipe flow turbulence.

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Akshunna Shaurya Dogra; Björn Hof


arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018

Complexity of the laminar-turbulent boundary in pipe flow

Nazmi Burak Budanur; Björn Hof

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Predrag Cvitanović

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Davide Scarselli

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Jakob Kühnen

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Michael Riedl

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Daniel Borrero-Echeverry

Georgia Institute of Technology

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