Burgers turbulence subject to a force f(x, t) =
[sum ]jfj(x)δ(t − tj), where tj are 'kicking times' and the 'impulses' fj(x) have arbitrary space dependence, combines
features of the purely decaying and the continuously forced cases. With large-scale
forcing this ‘kicked’ Burgers turbulence presents many of the regimes proposed by E
et al. (1997) for the case of random white-noise-in-time forcing. It is also amenable to
efficient numerical simulations in the inviscid limit, using a modification of the fast
Legendre transform method developed for decaying Burgers turbulence by Noullez
& Vergassola (1994). For the kicked case, concepts such as ‘minimizers’ and ‘main
shock’, which play crucial roles in recent developments for forced Burgers turbulence,
become elementary since everything can be constructed from simple two-dimensional
area-preserving Euler–Lagrange maps.
The main results are for the case of identical deterministic kicks which are periodic
and analytic in space and are applied periodically in time. When the space integrals of
the initial velocity and of the impulses vanish, it is proved and illustrated numerically
that a space- and time-periodic solution is achieved exponentially fast. In this regime,
probabilities can be defined by averaging over space and time periods. The probability
densities of large negative velocity gradients and of (not-too-large) negative velocity
increments follow the power law with −7/2 exponent proposed by E et al. (1997) in
the inviscid limit, whose existence is still controversial in the case of white-in-time
forcing. This power law, which is seen very clearly in the numerical simulations, is the
signature of nascent shocks (preshocks) and holds only when at least one new shock
is born between successive kicks.
It is shown that the third-order structure function over a spatial separation Δx
is analytic in Δx although the velocity field is generally only piecewise analytic (i.e.
between shocks). Structure functions of order p ≠ 3 are non-analytic at Δx = 0.
For even p there is a leading-order term proportional to [mid ]Δx[mid ] and for odd
p > 3 the leading-order term ∝Δx has a non-analytic correction
∝Δx[mid ]Δx[mid ] stemming from shock mergers.