The Reynolds Number
A fundamental characteristic in analyses of fluid flow is the Reynolds number:
where U denotes a velocity scale, and L denotes a representative length. The Reynolds number represents the ratio between inertial and viscous forces. At low Reynolds numbers, viscous forces dominate and tend to damp out all disturbances, which leads to laminar flow. At high Reynolds numbers, the damping in the system is very low, giving small disturbances the possibility to grow by nonlinear interactions. If the Reynolds number is high enough, the flow field eventually ends up in a chaotic state called turbulence.
Observe that the Reynolds number can have different meanings depending on the length scale and velocity scale. To be able to compare two Reynolds numbers, they must be based on equivalent length and velocity scales.
The Fluid Flow interfaces automatically calculate the local cell Reynolds number Rec = ρ|u|h/(2μ) using the element length h for L and the magnitude of the velocity vector u for the velocity scale U. This Reynolds number is not related to the character of the flow field, but to the stability of the numerical discretization. The risk for numerical oscillations in the solution increases as Rec grows. The cell Reynolds number is a predefined quantity available for visualization and evaluation (typically it is available as: spf.cellRe).