Vanishing viscosity limit for axisymmetric vortex rings

From MaRDI portal
Publication:6422426

DOI10.1007/S00222-024-01261-5arXiv2301.01092MaRDI QIDQ6422426

Vladimír Šverák, Thierry Gallay

Publication date: 3 January 2023

Abstract: For the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations in R3 with low viscosity u>0, we consider the Cauchy problem with initial vorticity omega0 that represents an infinitely thin vortex filament of arbitrary given strength Gamma supported on a circle. The vorticity field omega(x,t) of the solution is smooth at any positive time and corresponds to a vortex ring of thickness sqrtut that is translated along its symmetry axis due to self-induction, an effect anticipated by Helmholtz in 1858 and quantified by Kelvin in 1867. For small viscosities, we show that omega(x,t) is well-approximated on a large time interval by omegalin(xa(t),t), where omegalin(cdot,t)=exp(utDelta)omega0 is the solution of the heat equation with initial data omega0, and dota(t) is the instantaneous velocity given by Kelvin's formula. This gives a rigorous justification of the binormal motion for circular vortex filaments in weakly viscous fluids. The proof relies on the construction of a precise approximate solution, using a perturbative expansion in self-similar variables. To verify the stability of this approximation, one needs to rule out potential instabilities coming from very large advection terms in the linearized operator. This is done by adapting V. I. Arnold's geometric stability methods developed in the inviscid case u=0 to the slightly viscous situation. It turns out that although the geometric structures behind Arnold's approach are no longer preserved by the equation for u>0, the relevant quadratic forms behave well on larger subspaces than those originally used in Arnold's theory and interact favorably with the viscous terms.







Related Items (2)






This page was built for publication: Vanishing viscosity limit for axisymmetric vortex rings

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6422426)