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Ricardo Vinuesa

Ricardo Vinuesa contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

22 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Mixed-Metric Two-Field Framework for Turbulence: Emergent Stress Anisotropy and Wall Asymptotics from a Single Scalar

In our previous work~\cite{SanchisAgudoVinuesa2025PRL}, we argued that viscous dissipation in turbulence can be understood as the macroscopic imprint of microscopic path uncertainty, and showed that a kernel variance field $s(y)$ constrained by a balance condition yields both the Kolmogorov scales and the logarithmic law of the wall from a single stochastic principle. In the present work we promote $s$ to a dynamical field $s(\bm{x},t)$ with units of kinematic viscosity and develop a two-field framework in which the velocity $\ve$ and an \emph{intermittency} (or stochastic diffusivity) field $s$ evolve in a coupled way. The effective viscosity is $ν_{\mathrm{eff}}=ν_0+s$, but the stress tensor is generalized to include a non-linear closure driven by the commutator of strain and rotation, $[\bm{S}, \bmΩ]$, capturing emergent anisotropy. The evolution of $s$ is defined as a mixed-metric gradient flow: a Wasserstein-2 gradient flow for morphology, $\Div(s\grad s)$, combined with a local $L^2$ gradient flow driven by an objective coupling term $q$. The coupling is decomposed as $q=q_{\mathrm{prod}}-q_{\mathrm{relax}}$, where production is driven by a vortex-stretching invariant, $\mathcal{I} = \|\bm{S}\boldsymbolω\|^2$. This choice ensures that production vanishes identically in strictly two-dimensional flows. We show that, under standard assumptions of constant stress, high Reynolds number and overlap-layer scale invariance, the only scale-invariant overlap-layer solution of the mixed-metric equation is $s(y)\propto y$, which recovers the logarithmic velocity profile. Thus the same mixed-metric equation organizes both wall-resolved and wall-modeled asymptotics within a single, energetically constrained framework.

preprint2026arXiv

AeroJEPA: Learning Semantic Latent Representations for Scalable 3D Aerodynamic Field Modeling

Aerodynamic surrogate models are increasingly used to replace repeated high-fidelity CFD evaluations in many-query design settings, but current approaches still face two important limitations: they often scale poorly to the very large fields arising in realistic 3D aerodynamics, and they rarely produce latent representations that are directly useful for analysis and design. We introduce AeroJEPA, a Joint-Embedding Predictive Architecture for aerodynamic field modeling that addresses both issues. Rather than predicting the full flow field directly from geometry, AeroJEPA predicts a target latent representation of the flow from a context latent representation of the geometry and operating conditions, and optionally reconstructs the field through a continuous implicit decoder. This formulation decouples latent prediction from field resolution while encouraging the latent space to organize semantically. We evaluate AeroJEPA on two complementary datasets: HiLiftAeroML, which stresses the method in a high-fidelity regime with extremely large boundary-layer fields, and SuperWing, which tests large-scale generalization and latent-space optimization over a broad family of transonic wings. Across these benchmarks, AeroJEPA is competitive as a continuous surrogate for aerodynamic fields, scales naturally to high-resolution outputs, and learns context and predicted latents that encode geometry and aerodynamic quantities not used directly as supervision. We further show that the resulting latent space supports controlled interpolation, linear probing, concept-vector arithmetic, and a constrained design latent-optimization experiment. These results suggest that predictive latent learning is a promising direction for scalable and design-meaningful aerodynamic surrogate modeling.

preprint2026arXiv

Data-Driven Reduced-Complexity Modeling of Fluid Flows: A Community Challenge

We introduce a community challenge designed to facilitate direct comparisons between data-driven methods for compression, forecasting, and sensing of complex aerospace flows. The challenge is organized into three tracks that target these complementary capabilities: compression (compact representations for large datasets), forecasting (predicting future flow states from a finite history), and sensing (inferring unmeasured flow states from limited measurements). Across these tracks, multiple challenges span diverse flow datasets and use cases, each emphasizing different model requirements. The challenge is open to anyone, and we invite broad participation to build a comprehensive and balanced picture of what works and where current methods fall short. To support fair comparisons, we provide standardized success metrics, evaluation tools, and baseline implementations, with one classical and one machine-learning baseline per challenge. Final assessments use blind tests on withheld data. We explicitly encourage negative results and careful analyses of limitations. Outcomes will be disseminated through an AIAA Journal Virtual Collection and invited presentations at AIAA conferences.

preprint2026arXiv

High-lift Wing Separation Control via Bayesian Optimization and Deep Reinforcement Learning

This study investigates active flow control (AFC) of a 30P30N high-lift wing at a Reynolds number Re$_c$ = 450,000 and angle of attack $α$ = 23$^\circ$ using wallresolved large-eddy simulations (LES). Two optimization strategies are explored: open-loop Bayesian optimization (BO) and closed-loop deep reinforcement learning (DRL), both targeting the mitigation of stall and the improvement of aerodynamic efficiency via synthetic jets on the slat, main, and flap elements. The uncontrolled configuration was validated against literature data, confirming the reliability of the LES setup. The BO framework successfully identified steady jet velocities that increased efficiency by +10.9% through a -9.7% drag reduction while maintaining lift. In contrast, the DRL agent, despite leveraging instantaneous flow information from distributed sensors, achieved only minor improvements in lift and drag, with negligible efficiency gain. Training analysis indicated that the penalty-dominated reward constrained exploration. These results highlight the need for carefully designed rewards and computational acceleration strategies in DRL-based flow control at high Reynolds numbers.

preprint2026arXiv

X-CAL: Explaining latent causality in physical space for fluid mechanics

We present X-CAL, a pipeline that combines a $β$-variational autoencoder ($β$-VAE) with the synergistic-unique-redundant decomposition (SURD)~\cite{surd} approach for causality analysis to interpret low-dimensional latent representations of turbulent fluid flows. Combining $β$-VAE compression with SURD and SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) yields interpretable latent representations and structure-level attributions in physical space, offering a general methodology for causal analysis of high-dimensional flows. Using direct numerical simulation (DNS) data of the flow around a wall-mounted square cylinder at $Re_h=2000$, we (i) learn a compact latent space with near-orthogonal variables, (ii) quantify directed information flows among these variables via the SURD approach, and (iii) map latent-space causality back to physical space through gradient-SHAP fields . By means of percolation analysis of the SHAP fields, we extract the coherent, time-resolved structures that most influence each latent variable. The analysis connects coherent structures with latent variables which are in turn associated with wake-boundary-layer interactions. This method enables translating the insight obtained through causal analysis in the latent space into interpretable phenomena in physical space.

preprint2022arXiv

A deep-learning approach for reconstructing 3D turbulent flows from 2D observation data

Turbulence is a complex phenomenon that has a chaotic nature with multiple spatio-temporal scales, making predictions of turbulent flows a challenging topic. Nowadays, an abundance of high-fidelity databases can be generated by experimental measurements and numerical simulations, but obtaining such accurate data in full-scale applications is currently not possible. This motivates utilising deep learning on subsets of the available data to reduce the required cost of reconstructing the full flow in such full-scale applications. Here, we develop a generative-adversarial-network (GAN)-based model to reconstruct the three-dimensional velocity fields from flow data represented by a cross-plane of unpaired two-dimensional velocity observations. The model could successfully reconstruct the flow fields with accurate flow structures, statistics and spectra. The results indicate that our model can be successfully utilised for reconstructing three-dimensional flows from two-dimensional experimental measurements. Consequently, a remarkable reduction of the experimental setup cost can be achieved.

preprint2022arXiv

An adverse-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layer with nearly-constant $\boldsymbol{β\simeq 1.4}$ up to $\boldsymbol{Re_θ \simeq 8,700}$

In this study, a new well-resolved large-eddy-simulation (LES) of an incompressible near-equilibrium adverse-pressure-gradient (APG) turbulent boundary layer (TBL) over a flat plate is presented. In this simulation, we have established a near-equilibrium APG over a wide Reynolds-number range. In this so-called region of interest (ROI), the Clauser--Rotta pressure-gradient parameter $β$ exhibits an approximately constant value of around 1.4, and the Reynolds number based on momentum thickness reaches $Re_θ=8700$. To the authors' knowledge, this is to date the highest $Re_θ$ achieved for a near-equilibrium APG TBL under an approximately constant moderate APG. We evaluated the self-similarity of the outer region using two scalings, namely the Zagarola--Smits and an alternative one based on edge velocity and displacement thickness. Our results reveal that outer-layer similarity is achieved, and the viscous scaling collapses the near-wall region of the mean flow in agreement with classical theory. Spectral analysis reveals that the APG displaces some small-scale energy from the near-wall to the outer region, an effect observed for all the components of the Reynolds-stress tensor, which becomes more evident at higher Reynolds numbers. Generally, the effects of the APG are more noticeable at lower Reynolds numbers. For instance, the outer peak of turbulent-kinetic-energy (TKE) production is less prominent at higher $Re$. While the scale separation increases with $Re$ in zero-pressure-gradient (ZPG) TBLs, this effect becomes accentuated by the APG. Despite the reduction of the outer TKE production at higher Reynolds numbers, the mechanisms of energization of large scales are still present.

preprint2022arXiv

Assessments of epistemic uncertainty using Gaussian stochastic weight averaging for fluid-flow regression

We use Gaussian stochastic weight averaging (SWAG) to assess the model-form uncertainty associated with neural-network-based function approximation relevant to fluid flows. SWAG approximates a posterior Gaussian distribution of each weight, given training data, and a constant learning rate. Having access to this distribution, it is able to create multiple models with various combinations of sampled weights, which can be used to obtain ensemble predictions. The average of such an ensemble can be regarded as the `mean estimation', whereas its standard deviation can be used to construct `confidence intervals', which enable us to perform uncertainty quantification (UQ) with regard to the training process of neural networks. We utilize representative neural-network-based function approximation tasks for the following cases: (i) a two-dimensional circular-cylinder wake; (ii) the DayMET dataset (maximum daily temperature in North America); (iii) a three-dimensional square-cylinder wake; and (iv) urban flow, to assess the generalizability of the present idea for a wide range of complex datasets. SWAG-based UQ can be applied regardless of the network architecture, and therefore, we demonstrate the applicability of the method for two types of neural networks: (i) global field reconstruction from sparse sensors by combining convolutional neural network (CNN) and multi-layer perceptron (MLP); and (ii) far-field state estimation from sectional data with two-dimensional CNN. We find that SWAG can obtain physically-interpretable confidence-interval estimates from the perspective of model-form uncertainty. This capability supports its use for a wide range of problems in science and engineering.

preprint2022arXiv

Enhancing Computational Fluid Dynamics with Machine Learning

Machine learning is rapidly becoming a core technology for scientific computing, with numerous opportunities to advance the field of computational fluid dynamics. In this Perspective, we highlight some of the areas of highest potential impact, including to accelerate direct numerical simulations, to improve turbulence closure modeling, and to develop enhanced reduced-order models. We also discuss emerging areas of machine learning that are promising for computational fluid dynamics, as well as some potential limitations that should be taken into account.

preprint2022arXiv

High-resolution large-eddy simulations of simplified urban flows

High-fidelity large-eddy simulations of the flow around two rectangular obstacles are carried out at a Reynolds number of 10,000 based on the free-stream velocity and the obstacle height. The incoming flow is a developed turbulent boundary layer. Mean-velocity components, turbulence fluctuations, and the terms of the turbulent-kinetic-energy budget are analyzed for three flow regimes: skimming flow, wake interference, and isolated roughness. Three regions are identified where the flow undergoes the most significant changes: the first obstacle's wake, the region in front of the second obstacle, and that around the second obstacle. In the skimming-flow case, turbulence activity in the cavity between the obstacles is limited and mainly occurs in a small region in front of the second obstacle. In the wake-interference case, there is a strong interaction between the free-stream flow that penetrates the cavity and the wake of the first obstacle. This interaction results in more intense turbulent fluctuations between the obstacles. In the isolated-roughness case, the wake of the first obstacle is in good agreement with that of an isolated obstacle. Separation bubbles with strong turbulent fluctuations appear around the second obstacle.

preprint2022arXiv

New insight into the spectra of turbulent boundary layers with pressure gradients

With the availability of new high-Reynolds-number ($Re$) databases of turbulent boundary layers (TBLs) it has been possible to identify in detail certain regions of the boundary layer with more complex behavior. In this study we consider a unique database at moderately-high $Re$, with a near-constant adverse pressure gradient (APG) (Pozuelo {\it et al.}, {\it J. Fluid Mech.}, {\bf 939}, A34, 2022), and perform spectral analysis of the Reynolds stresses, focusing on the streamwise component. We assess different regions of the APG TBL, comparing this case with the zero-pressure-gradient (ZPG) TBL, and identify the relevant scaling parameters as well as the contribution of the scales of different sizes. The small scales in the near-wall region up to the near-wall spectral peak have been found to scale using viscous units. In APG TBLs, the largest scales close to the wall have a better scaling with the boundary-layer thickness ($δ_{99}$), and they are significantly affected by the APG. In the overlap and wake regions of the boundary layer, the small energetic scales exhibit a good scaling with the displacement thickness ($δ^*$) while the larger scales and the outer spectral peak are better scaled with the boundary-layer thickness. Also note that the wall-normal location of the spectral outer peak scales with the displacement thickness rather than the boundary layer thickness. The various scalings exhibited by the spectra in APG TBLs are reported here for the first time, and shed light on the complex phenomena present in these flows of great scientific and technological importance.

preprint2022arXiv

On the generation and destruction mechanisms of arch vortices in urban fluid flows

Studying and interpreting the different flow patterns present in urban areas is becoming essential since they help develop new approaches to fight climate change through an improved understanding of the dynamics of the pollutants in urban environments. This study uses higher order dynamic mode decomposition (HODMD) to analyze a high-fidelity database of the turbulent flow in various simplified urban environments. The geometry simulated consists of two buildings separated by a certain distance. Three different cases have been studied, corresponding to the three different regimes identified in the bibliography. We recognize the characteristics of the well-known arch vortex forming on the leeward side of the first building and document possible generation and destruction mechanisms of this vortex based on the resulting temporal modes. These so-called vortex-generating and vortex-breaking modes are further analyzed via proper-orthogonal decomposition. We show that the arch vortex plays a prominent role in the dispersion of pollutants in urban environments, where its generation leads to an increase in their concentration; therefore, the reported mechanisms are of extreme importance in the context of urban sustainability.

preprint2022arXiv

Predicting the temporal dynamics of turbulent channels through deep learning

The success of recurrent neural networks (RNNs) has been demonstrated in many applications related to turbulence, including flow control, optimization, turbulent features reproduction as well as turbulence prediction and modeling. With this study we aim to assess the capability of these networks to reproduce the temporal evolution of a minimal turbulent channel flow. We first obtain a data-driven model based on a modal decomposition in the Fourier domain (which we denote as FFT-POD) of the time series sampled from the flow. This particular case of turbulent flow allows us to accurately simulate the most relevant coherent structures close to the wall. Long-short-term-memory (LSTM) networks and a Koopman-based framework (KNF) are trained to predict the temporal dynamics of the minimal-channel-flow modes. Tests with different configurations highlight the limits of the KNF method compared to the LSTM, given the complexity of the flow under study. Long-term prediction for LSTM show excellent agreement from the statistical point of view, with errors below 2% for the best models with respect to the reference. Furthermore, the analysis of the chaotic behaviour through the use of the Lyapunov exponents and of the dynamic behaviour through Poincaré maps emphasizes the ability of the LSTM to reproduce the temporal dynamics of turbulence. Alternative reduced-order models (ROMs), based on the identification of different turbulent structures, are explored and they continue to show a good potential in predicting the temporal dynamics of the minimal channel.

preprint2022arXiv

Remote sensing and AI for building climate adaptation applications

Urban areas are not only one of the biggest contributors to climate change, but also they are one of the most vulnerable areas with high populations who would together experience the negative impacts. In this paper, we address some of the opportunities brought by satellite remote sensing imaging and artificial intelligence (AI) in order to measure climate adaptation of cities automatically. We propose a framework combining AI and simulation which may be useful for extracting indicators from remote-sensing images and may help with predictive estimation of future states of these climate-adaptation-related indicators. When such models become more robust and used in real life applications, they may help decision makers and early responders to choose the best actions to sustain the well-being of society, natural resources and biodiversity. We underline that this is an open field and an on-going area of research for many scientists, therefore we offer an in-depth discussion on the challenges and limitations of data-driven methods and the predictive estimation models in general.

preprint2022arXiv

Resolvent Analysis of laminar and turbulent duct flows

This work applies resolvent analysis to incompressible flow through a rectangular duct, in order to identify dominant linear energy-amplification mechanisms present in such flows. In particular, we formulate the resolvent operator from linearizing the Navier--Stokes equations about a two-dimensional base/mean flow. The laminar base flow only has a nonzero streamwise velocity component, while the turbulent case exhibits a secondary mean flow (Prandtl's secondary flow of the second kind). A singular value decomposition of the resolvent operator allows for the identification of structures corresponding to maximal energy amplification, for specified streamwise wavenumbers and temporal frequencies. Resolvent analysis has been fruitful for analysis of wall-bounded flows with spanwise homogeneity, and here we aim to explore how such methods and findings can extend for a flow in spatial domains of finite spanwise extent. We investigate how linear energy-amplification mechanisms (in particular the response to harmonic forcing) change in magnitude and structure as the aspect ratio (defined as the duct width divided by its height) varies between one (a square duct) and ten. We additionally study the effect that secondary flow has on linear energy-amplification mechanisms, finding that in different regimes it can either enhance or suppress amplification. We further investigate how the secondary flow alters the forcing and response mode shapes leading to maximal linear energy amplification.

preprint2021arXiv

Aim in Climate Change and City Pollution

The sustainability of urban environments is an increasingly relevant problem. Air pollution plays a key role in the degradation of the environment as well as the health of the citizens exposed to it. In this chapter we provide a review of the methods available to model air pollution, focusing on the application of machine-learning methods. In fact, machine-learning methods have proved to importantly increase the accuracy of traditional air-pollution approaches while limiting the development cost of the models. Machine-learning tools have opened new approaches to study air pollution, such as flow-dynamics modelling or remote-sensing methodologies.

preprint2021arXiv

COVID-19 Digital Contact Tracing Applications and Techniques: A Review Post Initial Deployments

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a severe global pandemic that has claimed millions of lives and continues to overwhelm public health systems in many countries. The spread of COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted the human mobility patterns such as daily transportation-related behavior of the public. There is a requirement to understand the disease spread patterns and its routes among neighboring individuals for the timely implementation of corrective measures at the required placement. To increase the effectiveness of contact tracing, countries across the globe are leveraging advancements in mobile technology and Internet of Things (IoT) to aid traditional manual contact tracing to track individuals who have come in close contact with identified COVID-19 patients. Even as the first administration of vaccines begins in 2021, the COVID-19 management strategy will continue to be multi-pronged for the foreseeable future with digital contact tracing being a vital component of the response along with the use of preventive measures such as social distancing and the use of face masks. After some months of deployment of digital contact tracing technology, deeper insights into the merits of various approaches and the usability, privacy, and ethical trade-offs involved are emerging. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive analysis of digital contact tracing solutions in terms of their methodologies and technologies in the light of the new data emerging about international experiences of deployments of digital contact tracing technology. We also provide a discussion on open challenges such as scalability, privacy, adaptability and highlight promising directions for future work.

preprint2021arXiv

Physics-informed neural networks for solving Reynolds-averaged Navier$\unicode{x2013}$Stokes equations

Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) are successful machine-learning methods for the solution and identification of partial differential equations (PDEs). We employ PINNs for solving the Reynolds-averaged Navier$\unicode{x2013}$Stokes (RANS) equations for incompressible turbulent flows without any specific model or assumption for turbulence, and by taking only the data on the domain boundaries. We first show the applicability of PINNs for solving the Navier$\unicode{x2013}$Stokes equations for laminar flows by solving the Falkner$\unicode{x2013}$Skan boundary layer. We then apply PINNs for the simulation of four turbulent-flow cases, i.e., zero-pressure-gradient boundary layer, adverse-pressure-gradient boundary layer, and turbulent flows over a NACA4412 airfoil and the periodic hill. Our results show the excellent applicability of PINNs for laminar flows with strong pressure gradients, where predictions with less than 1% error can be obtained. For turbulent flows, we also obtain very good accuracy on simulation results even for the Reynolds-stress components.

preprint2020arXiv

A socio-technical framework for digital contact tracing

In their efforts to tackle the COVID-19 crisis, decision makers are considering the development and use of smartphone applications for contact tracing. Even though these applications differ in technology and methods, there is an increasing concern about their implications for privacy and human rights. Here we propose a framework to evaluate their suitability in terms of impact on the users, employed technology and governance methods. We illustrate its usage with three applications, and with the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) guidelines, highlighting their limitations.

preprint2020arXiv

An Uncertainty-Quantification Framework for Assessing Accuracy, Sensitivity, and Robustness in Computational Fluid Dynamics

A framework is developed based on different uncertainty quantification (UQ) techniques in order to assess validation and verification (V&V) metrics in computational physics problems, in general, and computational fluid dynamics (CFD), in particular. The metrics include accuracy, sensitivity and robustness of the simulator's outputs with respect to uncertain inputs and computational parameters. These parameters are divided into two groups: based on the variation of the first group, a computer experiment is designed, the data of which may become uncertain due to the parameters of the second group. To construct a surrogate model based on uncertain data, Gaussian process regression (GPR) with observation-dependent (heteroscedastic) noise structure is used. To estimate the propagated uncertainties in the simulator's outputs from first and also the combination of first and second groups of parameters, standard and probabilistic polynomial chaos expansions (PCE) are employed, respectively. Global sensitivity analysis based on Sobol decomposition is performed in connection with the computer experiment to rank the parameters based on their influence on the simulator's output. To illustrate its capabilities, the framework is applied to the scale-resolving simulations of turbulent channel flow using the open-source CFD solver Nek5000. Due to the high-order nature of Nek5000 a thorough assessment of the results' accuracy and reliability is crucial, as the code is aimed at high-fidelity simulations. The detailed analyses and the resulting conclusions can enhance our insight into the influence of different factors on physics simulations, in particular the simulations of wall-bounded turbulence.

preprint2020arXiv

On the use of recurrent neural networks for predictions of turbulent flows

In this paper, the prediction capabilities of recurrent neural networks are assessed in the low-order model of near-wall turbulence by Moehlis {\it et al.} (New J. Phys. {\bf 6}, 56, 2004). Our results show that it is possible to obtain excellent predictions of the turbulence statistics and the dynamic behavior of the flow with properly trained long short-term memory (LSTM) networks, leading to relative errors in the mean and the fluctuations below $1\%$. We also observe that using a loss function based only on the instantaneous predictions of the flow may not lead to the best predictions in terms of turbulence statistics, and it is necessary to define a stopping criterion based on the computed statistics. Furthermore, more sophisticated loss functions, including not only the instantaneous predictions but also the averaged behavior of the flow, may lead to much faster neural network training.

preprint2019arXiv

The role of artificial intelligence in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals

The emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) and its progressively wider impact on many sectors across the society requires an assessment of its effect on sustainable development. Here we analyze published evidence of positive or negative impacts of AI on the achievement of each of the 17 goals and 169 targets of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. We find that AI can support the achievement of 128 targets across all SDGs, but it may also inhibit 58 targets. Notably, AI enables new technologies that improve efficiency and productivity, but it may also lead to increased inequalities among and within countries, thus hindering the achievement of the 2030 Agenda. The fast development of AI needs to be supported by appropriate policy and regulation. Otherwise, it would lead to gaps in transparency, accountability, safety and ethical standards of AI-based technology, which could be detrimental towards the development and sustainable use of AI. Finally, there is a lack of research assessing the medium- and long-term impacts of AI. It is therefore essential to reinforce the global debate regarding the use of AI and to develop the necessary regulatory insight and oversight for AI-based technologies.