4.7 Article

Helicity dynamics in viscous vortex links

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 944, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2022.532

Keywords

vortex dynamics

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The dynamics of two slender Hopf-linked vortex rings were studied at different vortex Reynolds numbers, revealing that at high Re, the vortex rings reconnected to form smaller rings that then broke up into turbulent clouds. The global helicity H was not conserved at very high Re, with twist playing a significant role in helicity dynamics at high Re.
The dynamics of two slender Hopf-linked vortex rings at vortex Reynolds numbers (Re Gamma/v, circulation/viscosity) 2000, 3000 and 4000 is studied using direct numerical simulations of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations. Under self-induction, the initially perpendicularly placed vortex rings approach each other and reconnect to form two separate vortex rings. The leading ring is closely cuddled and further undergoes secondary reconnection to form two even smaller rings. At high Re, the leading ring and the subsequent smaller rings are unstable and break up into turbulent clouds consisting of numerous even smaller-scale structures. Although the global helicity H remains constant before reconnection, it increases and then rapidly decays during reconnection - both the growth and decay rates increase with Re. In the two higher Re (i.e. 3000 and 4000) cases, H further rises after the first reconnection and reaches a quasi-plateau with the asymptotic value continuously increasing with Re - suggesting that H for viscous flows is not conserved at very high Re. Further flow analysis demonstrates that significant numbers of positive and negative helical structures are simultaneously generated before and during reconnection, and their different decay rates is the main reason for the complex evolution of H. By examining the topological aspects of the helicity dynamics, we find that, different from H, the sum of link and writhe (L-k + W-r) continuously drop during reconnection. Our results also clearly demonstrate that the twist, which increases with Re, plays a significant role in the helicity dynamics, particularly at high Re.

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