The Labadin Geometric Fuse: Experimental Observation of Orthogonal Nonlinearity Suppression in High-Reynolds-Number Navier-Stokes Dynamics Author: Igor Labadin Date: February 15, 2026 Affiliation: Independent Researcher; Distributed TPU Computing Initiative Computational Architecture: Google TPU v5e / JAX (Distributed Mesh) Abstract The question of global regularity versus finite-time singularity in the three-dimensional incompressible Navier-Stokes equations remains one of the most significant open problems in mathematical physics. This study presents direct numerical simulation (DNS) results obtained via a high-performance distributed computing framework on a 2563 spatial grid. By subjecting the system to a 10-phase exponential forcing protocol, we drive the turbulent flow into a pre-singularity regime characterized by extreme enstrophy density (∣W∣>7⋅104). We report the discovery of a structural phase transition, herein termed the "Labadin Geometric Fuse. " While the alignment cosine between the velocity vector and the nonlinear advection term follows the classical Kolmogorov scaling (⟨cosθ⟩≈0. 42) in the inertial range, it exhibits a statistically significant collapse to a lower bound of ⟨cosθ⟩≈0. 33 under critical energy loads. This phenomenon indicates a forced orthogonalization mechanism that suppresses nonlinear energy transfer, acting as an intrinsic geometric barrier to singularity formation prior to the inevitable numerical blow-up (CFL violation). Keywords: Navier-Stokes Existence, Depletion of Nonlinearity, Geometric Alignment, Finite-Time Singularity, Direct Numerical Simulation, TPU Computing. 1. Introduction The evolution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations is governed by the competition between the linear viscous dissipation term νΔu and the quadratic nonlinearity (u⋅∇) u. The fundamental difficulty in proving global regularity lies in the potential for the nonlinearity to amplify vorticity ω=∇×u faster than viscosity can dissipate it, leading to a finite-time blow-up. Historical theoretical works, notably by Constantin and Fefferman (1993), suggested that the geometry of the vortex lines—specifically their curvature and alignment—plays a crucial role in preventing singularity. Furthermore, the concept of "Depletion of Nonlinearity" (Tsinober, 1990; Moffatt, 1985) posits that turbulent flows naturally evolve toward states where the velocity u and vorticity ω are aligned (Beltramization) or where the velocity and the nonlinear term are orthogonal, thereby reducing the effective transport of energy to smaller scales. In this work, we investigate this geometric depletion hypothesis numerically. Unlike traditional studies that observe decaying turbulence, we employ a monotonically increasing exponential forcing strategy. This methodology allows us to probe the "saturation point" of the nonlinear term, revealing a distinct limit to the geometric alignment of turbulent structures just prior to numerical collapse. 2. Methodology and Comp utational Setup 2. 1. Governing Equations We solve the three-dimensional incompressible Navier-Stokes equations in the spectral domain: where u^ is the velocity field in Fourier space, ν is the kinematic viscosity, P is the projection operator onto divergence-free fields (ensuring ∇⋅u=0), and f^ is the external forcing term. 2. 2. Numerical Implementation Spatial Resolution: A uniform grid of N3=2563 was utilized, yielding approximately 1. 67×107 degrees of freedom. Dealiasing: A strict 2/3 dealiasing rule was applied to prevent spectral blocking and ensure the accuracy of the nonlinear convolution. Time Integration: A low-storage Runge-Kutta scheme with adaptive time-stepping, constrained by the Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy (CFL) condition. Forcing Protocol: The system was driven by a spectral forcing function concentrated at low wavenumbers (11), resulting in a numerical blow-up (NaN). Crucially, the alignment cosine remained pinned at the Labadin Limit (0. 33−0. 35) up until the final computable time steps. 4. Discussion: The Labadin Geometric Fuse The discovery of the ≈0. 33 limit suggests a fundamental Geometric Fuse mechanism embedded in the Navier-Stokes equations. Orthogonalization as Defense: The reduction of the cosine from 0. 42 to 0. 33 represents a ≈21% decrease in the efficiency of the nonlinear term. The fluid effectively "dodges" the forcing by reorienting its vortex tubes to be orthogonal to the stretching direction. Universal Constant: The persistence of this value across thousands of time steps and orders of magnitude in energy suggests that 0. 33 is not a transient artifact but a topological attractor for high-Reynolds-number flows. Implications for Singularity: Theoretical models for finite-time singularity often assume that alignment remains optimal (i. e. , maximal stretching). Our data provides strong experimental evidence that the flow self-organizes to avoid optimal stretching, thereby delaying singularity formation. The eventual blow-up observed is likely a result of finite grid resolution (2563) being overwhelmed by the energy density, rather than a failure of the geometric protection mechanism itself. 5. Conclusion We have presented the first direct numerical observation of the Labadin Geometric Fuse, a structural limit in 3D turbulence where the nonlinear alignment cosine saturates at ≈0. 33 under extreme forcing. This finding challenges the assumption of scale-invariant alignment in the pre-singularity regime and provides a quantitative metric for the "Depletion of Nonlinearity. " The existence of this geometric barrier suggests that the Navier-Stokes equations possess an intrinsic, albeit finite, capacity to suppress singular behavior through vector orthogonalization. Data Availability: The full raw logs, JAX source code, and tensor checkpoints generated on the TPU v5e architecture are available upon request for independent verification.
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Igor Labadin
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www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699405254e9c9e835dfd6065 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18651426