Collective behaviour of large number of vortices in the plane
Author(s) -
Yuxin Chen,
Théodore Kolokolnikov,
Daniel Zhirov
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2013.0085
Subject(s) - vortex , physics , lattice (music) , ellipse , plane (geometry) , context (archaeology) , classical mechanics , statistical physics , mechanics , mathematics , geometry , paleontology , acoustics , biology
We investigate the dynamics of $N$ point vortices in the plane, in the limit of large $N$. We consider {\em relative equilibria}, which are rigidly rotating lattice-like configurations of vortices. These configurations were observed in several recent experiments [Durkin and Fajans, Phys. Fluids (2000) 12, 289-293; Grzybowski {\em et.al} PRE (2001)64, 011603]. We show that these solutions and their stability are fully characterized via a related {\em aggregation model} which was recently investigated in the context of biological swarms [Fetecau {\em et.al.}, Nonlinearity (2011) 2681; Bertozzi {\em et.al.}, M3AS (2011)]. By utilizing this connection, we give explicit analytic formulae for many of the configurations that have been observed experimentally. These include configurations of vortices of equal strength; the $N+1$ configurations of $N$ vortices of equal strength and one vortex of much higher strength; and more generally, $N+K$ configurations. We also give examples of configurations that have not been studied experimentally, including $N+2$ configurations where $N$ vortices aggregate inside an ellipse. Finally, we introduce an artificial ``damping'' to the vortex dynamics, in an attempt to explain the phenomenon of crystalization that is often observed in real experiments. The diffusion breaks the conservative structure of vortex dynamics so that any initial conditions converge to the lattice-like relative equilibrium.
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