1. Introduction
In the Lagrangian study of turbulence, a point-sized sphere is used to probe the flow since such a particle adopts the velocity and angular velocity of the fluid in its immediate vicinity. Extending this idea to spheroids (figure 1) offers a more intricate way to examine the Lagrangian flow structure since spheroids rotate due to both fluid rotation and strain, and thus the statistics of spheroid rotations reflect the Lagrangian dynamics of velocity gradients (Voth & Soldati Reference Voth and Soldati2017). Rotations of spheroidal particles and their coupling with velocity gradients are also important in applications where non-spherical particles are immersed in turbulent flows, such as microswimmers (Jumars et al. Reference Jumars, Trowbridge, Boss and Karp-Boss2009; Guasto, Rusconi & Stocker Reference Guasto, Rusconi and Stocker2012; Pujara, Koehl & Variano Reference Pujara, Koehl and Variano2018; Borgnino et al. Reference Borgnino, Gustavsson, De Lillo, Boffetta, Cencini and Mehlig2019; Bordoloi, Variano & Verhille Reference Bordoloi, Variano and Verhille2020), atmospheric aerosol and sediment transport (Spurny Reference Spurny2000; Mehta Reference Mehta2013; Gustavsson & Mehlig Reference Gustavsson and Mehlig2016; Roy et al. Reference Roy, Hamati, Tierney, Koch and Voth2019; Gustavsson et al. Reference Gustavsson, Sheikh, Naso, Pumir and Mehlig2021; Li et al. Reference Li, Lim, Berk, Abraham, Heisel, Guala, Coletti and Hong2021; Samant et al. Reference Samant, Alageshan, Sharma and Kuley2021), process engineering (Clift, Grace & Weber Reference Clift, Grace and Weber2005; Lundell, Söderberg & Alfredsson Reference Lundell, Söderberg and Alfredsson2011; Ardekani et al. Reference Ardekani, Costa, Breugem, Picano and Brandt2017; Ardekani & Brandt Reference Ardekani and Brandt2018; Schneiders et al. Reference Schneiders, Fröhlich, Meinke and Schröder2019; Will et al. Reference Will, Mathai, Huisman, Lohse, Sun and Krug2021) and flow diagnostics (Rosti et al. Reference Rosti, Banaei, Brandt and Mazzino2018; Hejazi, Krellenstein & Voth Reference Hejazi, Krellenstein and Voth2019; Cavaiola, Olivieri & Mazzino Reference Cavaiola, Olivieri and Mazzino2020).
In this study, we examine how spheroids of different shapes rotate due to their coupling with velocity gradients at different scales in homogeneous and isotropic turbulence. The angular velocity of a spheroid due to local velocity gradients in the absence of inertia is given by Jeffery's (Reference Jeffery1922) equation:
where $\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}$ is the particle angular velocity vector, $\boldsymbol {p}$ is the particle orientation vector and $\lambda = (\mathrm {AR}^2 - 1)/(\mathrm {AR}^2 + 1)$ is the shape factor with $\mathrm {AR}$ being the particle aspect ratio (figure 1). The velocity gradients are represented by the fluid vorticity vector $\boldsymbol {\omega }$ and the strain-rate tensor $\boldsymbol{\mathsf{S}}$, which relate to the velocity gradient tensor ${\mathsf{A}}_{ij} = \partial u_{i}/\partial x_j$ via ${{\mathsf{S}}_{ij}} = \tfrac {1}{2}({\mathsf{A}}_{ij} + {\mathsf{A}}_{ji})$ and $\omega _i = \varepsilon _{ijk}{\mathsf{A}}_{kj}$ with $\varepsilon _{ijk}$ being the alternating symbol. The first term of (1.1) shows that particles of all aspect ratios rotate at the local rotation rate of the fluid and the second term shows that non-spherical particles have additional rotation due to the local strain rate. Decomposing (1.1) into its spinning $(\boldsymbol {\omega _{p}} \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {p})$ and tumbling $(\mathrm {d}\boldsymbol {p}/\mathrm {d}t = \dot {\boldsymbol {p}} = \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}} \times \boldsymbol {p})$ rates gives
where spinning is the particle rotation about its axis of symmetry and tumbling is the particle rotation of the axis of symmetry. Spinning and tumbling are related to the total particle angular velocity via the Pythagorean relation $\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 = (\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}} \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {p})^2 + \dot {\boldsymbol {p}}^2$.
When spheroids follow Lagrangian fluid trajectories and rotate in response to the velocity gradients along those trajectories, the mean-square spinning ($\langle (\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}} \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {p})^2 \rangle$) and tumbling ($\langle \dot {\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle$) rates reflect the distribution of particle orientations with respect to principal directions of the velocity gradients. Equation (1.2b) shows that the particle tumbling rate for a given shape in isotropic turbulence is a joint distribution in a seven-dimensional space (Ni et al. Reference Ni, Kramel, Ouellette and Voth2015): five scalar parameters characterise the velocity gradient tensor in isotropic turbulence (e.g. two to quantify the eigenvalues of the strain-rate tensor, two to specify the orientation of vorticity in the strain-rate eigenframe, and one to quantify the magnitude of vorticity) and an additional two parameters describe the particle orientation with respect to the velocity gradient tensor (e.g. two angles relative to the strain-rate eigenframe). Thus, the spinning and tumbling rates depend on the history of vorticity and strain along Lagrangian trajectories. Being able to predict these rotation rates is useful for the applications mentioned above and for benchmarking stochastic models of the velocity gradient tensor; for example, Chevillard & Meneveau (Reference Chevillard and Meneveau2013) showed that a model based on the recent fluid deformation approximation was able to correctly predict the tumbling of rods and Leppin & Wilczek (Reference Leppin and Wilczek2020) showed that inclusion of strain-vorticity interactions and shorter autocorrelation time scales for the strain rate compared with the rotation rate were crucial for predicting the tumbling of discs.
Spinning and tumbling rates can be predicted analytically for particles randomly oriented with respect to the velocity gradient tensor, but results from experiments and direct numerical simulations (DNS) have shown that this does not provide an accurate prediction of particle rotation rates in turbulence (Shin & Koch Reference Shin and Koch2005; Parsa et al. Reference Parsa, Calzavarini, Toschi and Voth2012; Chevillard & Meneveau Reference Chevillard and Meneveau2013; Byron et al. Reference Byron, Einarsson, Gustavsson, Voth, Mehlig and Variano2015; Pujara & Variano Reference Pujara and Variano2017). For example, tumbling of small rods ($\textrm {AR} \gg 1$) and spinning of small discs ($\textrm {AR} \ll 1$) are suppressed relative to their values for random orientation. Qualitatively, this is understood to be because rods align with the vorticity causing them to spin more than they tumble and discs align perpendicularly to the vorticity causing them to tumble more than they spin (Pumir & Wilkinson Reference Pumir and Wilkinson2011; Ni, Ouellette & Voth Reference Ni, Ouellette and Voth2014; Byron et al. Reference Byron, Einarsson, Gustavsson, Voth, Mehlig and Variano2015). While this picture suggests that alignment with vorticity controls the dynamics of particle rotations, a quantitative understanding of this behaviour has not been found. For example, conditional averages of the seven-dimensional joint distribution showed that rod tumbling was equally strongly dependent on both the mean-square vorticity and strain rate and the problem could not be further simplified via a lower-dimensional projection (Ni et al. Reference Ni, Kramel, Ouellette and Voth2015). Here, we present a line of argument that allows us to quantitatively predict the spinning and tumbling rates of spheroids in isotropic turbulence based on their alignment with vorticity. We test this prediction against data from DNS and find good agreement.
Since spheroid rotation statistics reveal Lagrangian dynamics of velocity gradients, an understanding of the scale-dependency of these statistics can contribute to improving models of the turbulent energy cascade (Meneveau & Lund Reference Meneveau and Lund1994; Chertkov, Pumir & Shraiman Reference Chertkov, Pumir and Shraiman1999; Luthi et al. Reference Luthi, Ott, Berg and Mann2007; Xu, Pumir & Bodenschatz Reference Xu, Pumir and Bodenschatz2011; Pumir, Bodenschatz & Xu Reference Pumir, Bodenschatz and Xu2013), subgrid-scale models for large-eddy simulations (Meneveau, Lund & Cabot Reference Meneveau, Lund and Cabot1996; van der Bos et al. Reference van der Bos, Tao, Meneveau and Katz2002) and models of particle motion (Toschi & Bodenschatz Reference Toschi and Bodenschatz2009; Cisse, Homann & Bec Reference Cisse, Homann and Bec2013; Parsa & Voth Reference Parsa and Voth2014). As a way to characterise multiscale properties of Lagrangian turbulence, we investigate the scale-dependency in our simulations using a filtering approach where particle rotations are tracked along Lagrangian trajectories in turbulent velocity fields filtered at various scales. Our results show that particle rotation statistics are remarkably scale-independent when normalised appropriately and we are able to predict the spinning and tumbling rates for different shapes from the dissipation scales to the integral scale. We interpret this as a sign of fairly robust scale-invariance for velocity gradients across the complete scale spectrum of turbulence when examined in the Lagrangian frame.
2. Direct numerical simulations
2.1. Velocity gradients along Lagrangian trajectories
We use DNS of isotropic turbulence to generate data of velocity gradient time histories along Lagrangian trajectories. We do this in the fully resolved flow field and for the flow field filtered at various length scales.
The DNS are performed with a standard pseudo-spectral Navier–Stokes solver. A third-order Runge–Kutta method is used for time stepping the vorticity formulation of the equation, and a high-order Fourier smoothing (Hou & Li Reference Hou and Li2007) is used for reducing aliasing errors. Turbulence is maintained in a 3-D-periodic domain of $2{\rm \pi} \times 2{\rm \pi} \times 2{\rm \pi}$ (DNS units) by applying a fixed energy injection rate in the wavenumber interval $1 \leqslant k \leqslant 2$ (DNS units). We use a small-scale resolution of $k_M \eta = 3$ (where $k_M$ is the maximum wavenumber resolved and $\eta$ is the Kolmogorov length) for a fully developed turbulent flow with a Taylor-scale Reynolds number $R_\lambda \approx 200$ and a scale separation of $L / \eta \approx 140$ and $T / \tau _\eta \approx 20$. Using the root-mean-squared velocity component u and the energy spectrum $E(k)$, the integral length is defined as $L = {\rm \pi}\int \textrm {d}k E(k) / (2k u^2)$ and the large eddy turn-over time as $T = L / u$. To generate filtered flow fields, the velocity field is filtered at length scale $\ell$ using a Gaussian filter as detailed in Lalescu & Wilczek (Reference Lalescu and Wilczek2018). Values for $\ell$ vary from zero (no filtering) to $L$ (the integral scale). Preliminary datasets were generated using all three spherically symmetric filter types described in Lalescu & Wilczek (Reference Lalescu and Wilczek2018) (i.e. ball filter, Gaussian filter, sharp spectral filter), but the filter type resulted in only small changes in the results with the overall trend being insensitive to the precise filter type.
At each filter scale $\ell$, $10^4$ tracer trajectories are integrated in the flow using the corresponding velocity fields, and the velocity gradient tensor is sampled along these trajectories to generate a large database of Lagrangian time histories of velocity gradients along tracer trajectories.
To analyse particle rotations across different filter scales, we introduce a scale-local time scale defined by $\tau _{\ell } = \langle {\mathsf{A}}_{ij} {\mathsf{A}}_{ij} \rangle ^{-1/2}$, which varies smoothly from $\tau _\eta$ for the fully resolved flow to the expected Kolmogorov scaling $\tau _{\ell } \sim \ell ^{2/3}$ in the inertial subrange (figure 2a). Here $\tau _{\ell }$ is a quantitative measure of the correlation time and the inverse strength of the velocity gradients at scale $\ell$, making it ideally suited to compare particle rotations across a range of scales. Note that we do not explicitly distinguish between filtered and unfiltered quantities in our notation. The filtering is implicitly indicated wherever there is a variation with $\ell$.
2.2. Scale-dependency in particle rotation statistics
We use the database of Lagrangian time histories of velocity gradients to compute the orientations and rotations of spheroids by integrating Jeffery's (Reference Jeffery1922) equations (1.2b) using a fourth-order Runge–Kutta method. After an initial transient of several $\tau _{\ell }$, the statistics of particle rotations reach a stationary state. We calculate the statistical moments of particle rotations after this initial transient period.
Figure 2(b) shows that data for mean-square particle angular velocity follows a power law scaling in the inertial subrange $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle \sim \ell ^{-4/3}$. This scaling behaviour, which was first introduced in the context of tumbling rods by Parsa & Voth (Reference Parsa and Voth2014) and found to be applicable in several other contexts since then (Bordoloi & Variano Reference Bordoloi and Variano2017; Bounoua, Bouchet & Verhille Reference Bounoua, Bouchet and Verhille2018; Pujara et al. Reference Pujara, Koehl and Variano2018; Pujara, Voth & Variano Reference Pujara, Voth and Variano2019; Oehmke et al. Reference Oehmke, Bordoloi, Variano and Verhille2021), can be derived based on the expectation that the particle rotation rate scales as the magnitude of the velocity gradients at a given scale $\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}} \sim \tau _{\ell }^{-1} = \langle {\mathsf{A}}_{ij} {\mathsf{A}}_{ij} \rangle ^{1/2}$ and that the magnitude of the velocity gradients follow Kolmogorov scaling in the inertial range ${\mathsf{A}}_{ij} \sim \ell ^{-2/3}$.
When the mean-square particle angular velocity is examined in terms of the scale-local time scale $\tau _{\ell }$ in figure 3(a), we observe that the mean-square rotation rate for particles for all scales is almost shape-independent. Particles of all shapes have approximately the same rotation rate as spheres (or spherical fluid elements) at all scales of turbulence so that $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle \approx \tfrac {1}{4}\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }^2 \rangle$. Surprisingly, figure 3(a) also shows that the relationship between particle shape and their spinning and tumbling rates is qualitatively preserved as the filter scale increases, even up to the integral scale. Discs tumble much more than they spin and rods spin more than they tumble at all scales of turbulence. As the filter scale increases, there is a shift towards the spinning and tumbling rates becoming weaker functions of particle shape, but the main qualitative trend is preserved. Overall, the results in figure 3(a), which are normalised by the scale-local time scale $\tau _{\ell }$, reflect an unexpected scale-invariance in the Lagrangian dynamics of velocity gradients.
To further examine the shape independence of the mean-square particle angular velocity $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle$, we take the mean square of (1.1) to analyse the situation in terms of rotations due to vorticity and strain. This shows that the mean-square particle angular velocity has contributions from vorticity, strain rate and a combination of vorticity and strain:
The particle shape only influences the second and third terms, which contain the strain-rate tensor. Figure 3(b) shows the particle rotation rates split into the three terms in (2.1). While the vorticity term is shape-independent and the strain term is always positive as expected, the cross term is almost exactly equal and opposite to the strain term. This near cancellation is the reason why $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle$ is nearly independent of particle shape at all scales in turbulence. We note that this behaviour is specific to Lagrangian trajectories and the mutual interactions between vorticity and strain-rate along these trajectories. The rotations of particles distributed at random positions and orientations within a snapshot of a turbulent velocity field do not show the same behaviour (as previously shown in Parsa et al. Reference Parsa, Calzavarini, Toschi and Voth2012; Chevillard & Meneveau Reference Chevillard and Meneveau2013; Pujara & Variano Reference Pujara and Variano2017). While this property of vorticity-strain interactions in the Lagrangian dynamics of velocity gradients was previously noted for point-sized particles (Byron et al. Reference Byron, Einarsson, Gustavsson, Voth, Mehlig and Variano2015; Pujara & Variano Reference Pujara and Variano2017), the results in figure 3(b) show that this behaviour is scale-invariant.
2.3. Particle spinning and tumbling
In this section, we show how the particle spinning and tumbling rates observed in figure 3(a) can be quantitatively predicted in terms of particle alignment with vorticity. Starting from (2.1), we note that an (approximate) cancellation of the last two terms on the right-side leads to $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle \approx \tfrac {1}{4} \langle \boldsymbol {\omega }^2 \rangle$. In homogeneous isotropic turbulence, the mean-square fluid vorticity and the mean dissipation rate are related via $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }^2 \rangle = 2 \langle {\mathsf{S}}_{ij}{\mathsf{S}}_{ij} \rangle = \tau _{\eta }^{-2}$, where $\tau _{\eta }$ is the Kolmogorov time scale that characterises the smallest scales of motion. In terms of $\tau _{\eta }$, the mean-square particle rotation rate would be
To predict the spinning and tumbling rates of particles, we next consider the spinning equation. By taking the mean square of (1.2a), we get
where we have assumed that the magnitude of vorticity and the degree of alignment between the particle and the vorticity are statistically independent. Here, eω is the unit vector that defines the direction of vorticity. Under this assumption, (2.3) gives a prediction for the mean-square spinning rate solely based on particle alignment with vorticity. We can also obtain a prediction for the tumbling rate in terms of the particle alignment with vorticity by combining (2.3) with (2.2) and using the Pythagorean relation $\langle \boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle = \langle (\boldsymbol {\omega }_{\boldsymbol {p}} \boldsymbol {\cdot } \boldsymbol {p})^2 \rangle + \langle \dot {\boldsymbol {p}}^2 \rangle$:
Altogether, we have predictions of the particle rotation, tumbling and spinning rates solely in terms of the particle alignment with vorticity:
We can now examine the predictions of (2.5) using data from our simulations. By replacing $\tau _{\eta }$ with $\tau _{\ell }$, we can also extend these predictions to all scales of turbulence. Since these predictions are based on the mean-square particle alignment with vorticity, we first show this quantity in figure 4. We see that while discs tend to be perpendicular to the vorticity and rods tend to be parallel to the vorticity, particles of all shapes become more randomly aligned with respect to vorticity as the filter scale increases. Particle alignment with vorticity can be understood as the longest particle axis and the vorticity vector both independently coming to align with the direction of Lagrangian stretching (Ni et al. Reference Ni, Ouellette and Voth2014). The data in figure 4 show that this effect weakens with increasing filter scale due to the effects of subfilter-scale motions on the velocity gradient dynamics (Chertkov et al. Reference Chertkov, Pumir and Shraiman1999; Pujara et al. Reference Pujara, Voth and Variano2019).
Next, we examine the assumption made in deriving (2.5), namely that particle alignment with vorticity is independent of the vorticity magnitude. Figure 5(a) shows the particle-vorticity alignment conditioned on the square of the vorticity magnitude for high-aspect-ratio rods and discs. We see that particle alignment with vorticity is stronger as the vorticity magnitude is increased, which likely reflects a recent history of Lagrangian stretching, but this variation does not stray too far from the overall mean-square alignment (shown by the thin horizontal coloured lines in figure 5). Examined in this way, our assumption is only partially supported by the data. However, in figure 5(b), we show a more direct evaluation of the assumption made in (2.3), namely that particle spinning can be related to particle alignment with vorticity via the relation $\langle ( \boldsymbol {\omega } \boldsymbol {\cdot }\boldsymbol {p} )^2 \rangle \approx \langle \boldsymbol {\omega }^2 \rangle \langle ( \boldsymbol {e}_{\omega } \boldsymbol {\cdot }\boldsymbol {p} )^2 \rangle$. The data show that this assumption has a less than 20 % error for moderately oblate to highly prolate particles with aspect ratios in the range $0.6 \le \mathrm{AR} \le 10$. It is interesting that for prolate particles, the mean-square particle spinning can be accurately estimated by assuming independence between vorticity magnitude and particle alignment with vorticity and that the error in this approximation is independent of filter scale. For highly oblate particles ($\mathrm{AR} \le 0.6$), the error in this approximation can be large and depends on the filter scale.
Finally, we show how the predictions of (2.5) compare against data in figure 6. The data lie close to the 1-to-1 lines (figure 6a,b), regardless of the filter scale and particle aspect ratio. Thus, (2.5) provide reasonable predictions of spinning and tumbling rates, despite invoking the approximation that particle alignment is independent of the strength of local vorticity. The error induced by this approximation does not greatly affect the quality of predictions from (2.5) because the error is either small in relative terms (prolate and moderately oblate particles) or because even when the error is large in relative terms it only leads to a small error in absolute terms (highly oblate particles). For highly oblate particles, the prediction of particle spinning has a large relative error, but small absolute error because such particles have low spinning rates. In fact, while the relative error is larger for oblate particles compared with prolate particles in figure 5(b), the absolute error is actually slightly smaller for the oblate particles compared with prolate particles in figure 6(a). In figures 6(c) and 6(d), we can see that these predictions fare well against data for different particle shapes for fully resolved data ($\ell /L = 0$) and for data at the largest filter scale ($\ell /L = 1$), respectively.
3. Discussion
We have conducted DNS to examine the statistics of the shape- and scale-dependent coupling between velocity gradients and spheroids in turbulence. By applying a filter that progressively removes small scales from the fully resolved simulations, we have obtained Lagrangian trajectories of tracer particles in filtered fields and calculated spheroid rotations along these trajectories using Jeffery's equation. Our focus has been on the particle rotation rates and on the decomposition of rotations in the particle frame into the spinning and tumbling rates.
Particle rotation rates decrease as the filter scale increases following a power law that is consistent with Kolmogorov scaling in the inertial subrange. When normalised by scale-local time scales, we find that the mean-square particle rotation rates are independent of the particle shape. Even though the spinning and tumbling rates are a function of particle shape, surprisingly, there is little additional dependency on scale. Moreover, we have also shown that relative rates of spinning and tumbling can be reasonably predicted solely from knowledge of particle alignment with the vorticity vector even though the full dependency of these rotation rates is a function of seven variables that quantify the velocity gradient tensor and particle orientation within its axes.
Our results consistently show that the dynamics of the velocity gradient tensor has scale-invariant properties in the Lagrangian frame that are not observed in the Eulerian frame. While Eulerian statistics of vorticity alignment with the strain eigenframe and flow topologies are known to exhibit qualitative differences in the inertial range relative to the dissipation (viscous) range (van der Bos et al. Reference van der Bos, Tao, Meneveau and Katz2002; Danish & Meneveau Reference Danish and Meneveau2018), no such changes are observed as a function of scale when velocity gradient dynamics is examined in the Lagrangian frame through the lens of coupling between velocity gradients and spheroids. Our results also suggest that spinning and tumbling rates of large anisotropic particles where particle inertia due to density differences with the fluid can be assumed small (e.g. Parsa & Voth Reference Parsa and Voth2014; Bordoloi & Variano Reference Bordoloi and Variano2017; Pujara et al. Reference Pujara, Voth and Variano2019) are likely to follow the same trends with particle shape previously observed in small particles (Voth & Soldati Reference Voth and Soldati2017). While a refined understanding of the detailed flow-particle interactions may still require laboratory experiments or particle-resolved simulations, our results show that it is possible to predict rotation statistics for subgrid-scale particles in large-eddy simulations in principle. For example, particle orientations and rotations at the smallest scale resolved in the simulations could be used to predict particle statistics at subgrid scales based on the scaling arguments provided herein. The scale-invariance of spinning and tumbling rates of spheroids also motivate future work on extending stochastic models of the Lagrangian velocity gradient tensor (Meneveau Reference Meneveau2011; Chevillard & Meneveau Reference Chevillard and Meneveau2013; Johnson & Meneveau Reference Johnson and Meneveau2018; Leppin & Wilczek Reference Leppin and Wilczek2020) to the inertial range. Finally, it would also be interesting to test our predictive framework for particle spinning and tumbling in other canonical turbulent flows such as channel flow where interesting similarities and differences have been observed in terms of how particles align compared with isotropic turbulence (Zhao & Andersson Reference Zhao and Andersson2016).
Acknowledgements
We thank M. Rampp (Max Planck Computing and Data Facility) for support with code optimisation, G. Voth (Wesleyan University) for useful discussions and E. Variano (UC Berkeley) for useful discussions and help with creating the graphical abstract image. We also acknowledge comments and suggestions from anonymous referees.
Funding
N.P. was supported by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation. J.A.A.L., C.C.L., B.B. and M.W. were supported by the Max Planck Society. M.W. also gratefully acknowledges a Fulbright-Cottrell Award grant.
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Author contributions
N.P., C.C.L. and M.W. designed the study, analysed data and reached conclusions. N.P., J.A.A.L., C.C.L. and B.B. wrote the code and J.A.A.L., C.C.L. and B.B. executed it. N.P. and M.W. derived the theory. N.P., J.A.A.L., C.C.L. and M.W. wrote the paper.