A Two-Level Relative-Entropy Theory for Isotropic Turbulence Spectra: Fokker–Planck Semigroup Irreversibility and WKB Selection of Dissipation Tails

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

We propose a two-level theory that connects a Lin-equation-based dynamical coarse-graining of the turbulence cascade with an information-theoretic selection principle in logarithmic wavenumber space, thereby placing the dissipation-range spectral shape on a verifiable logical chain rather than an ad hoc fit. In the first (dynamical) stage, an autonomous conservative Fokker–Planck description is formulated for the normalized density and probability current; assuming sufficient boundary decay and a strictly positive effective diffusion, we prove that the sign-reversed KL divergence is a Lyapunov functional, yielding a rigorous H-theorem and fixing the arrow of time in scale space. In the second (selection) stage, the dissipation range is posed as a stationary boundary-value problem for an open system by introducing a killing term for an unnormalized scale density. WKB (Liouville–Green) analysis constrains the admissible tail class to a stretched-exponential form and links the tail exponent to the high-wavenumber scaling of the effective diffusion. To eliminate arbitrariness, the exponential prefactor is fixed by dissipation-rate consistency, and the remaining degree of freedom is identified via one-dimensional KL minimization (Hyper-MaxEnt) against a globally constructed reference distribution. The resulting exponent range is validated against high-resolution DNS spectra reported in the literature.

Article activity feed