Majority of theoretical results regarding turbulent mixing are based on the model of ideal flows with zero correlation time. We discuss the reasons why such results may fail for real flows and develop a scheme which makes it possible to match real flows to ideal flows. In particular we introduce the concept of mixing dimension of flows which can take fractional values. For real incompressible flows, the mixing dimension exceeds the topological dimension; this leads to a local inhomogeneity of mixing -a phenomenon which is not observed for ideal flows and has profound implications, for instance impacting the rate of bimolecular reactions in turbulent flows. Finally, we build a model of compressible flows which reproduces the anomalous Lyapunov exponent values observed for time-correlated flows by Boffetta et al (2004), and provide a qualitative explanation of this phenomenon.
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