Sub-Kolmogorov Intermittency and Multifractal Dissipation in Multiphase Turbulence
Abstract
Multiphase turbulence displays stronger intermittency than its single-phase counterpart, yet the origin and geometrical organization of its most intense small-scale fluctuations remain poorly understood. Using direct numerical simulations of the incompressible Navier--Stokes equations with surface tension, we show that the local dissipative cutoff broadens strongly in the presence of interfaces, with dissipative events extending deep into the sub-Kolmogorov range. These events are spatially concentrated around topology-changing interfacial regions, namely breakup and coalescence. A multifractal analysis of the dissipation field further reveals that, while the spectrum above the Kolmogorov length, ηK, remains close to the single-phase case except for the most singular tail, the near- and sub-Kolmogorov range develops a markedly broader singularity spectrum supported on sparse intense structures. Our results show that breakup and coalescence do not simply perturb turbulence locally, but imprint a distinct multifractal organization on dissipation in multiphase turbulence.
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