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The degree of knottedness of tangled vortex lines
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2006
Abstract
Let u(x) be the velocity field in a fluid of infinite extent due to a vorticity distribution w(x) which is zero except in two closed vortex filaments of strengths K1, K2. It is first shown that the integral \[ I=\int{\bf u}.{\boldmath \omega}\,dV \] is equal to αK1K2 where α is an integer representing the degree of linkage of the two filaments; α = 0 if they are unlinked, ± 1 if they are singly linked. The invariance of I for a continuous localized vorticity distribution is then established for barotropic inviscid flow under conservative body forces. The result is interpreted in terms of the conservation of linkages of vortex lines which move with the fluid.
Some examples of steady flows for which I ± 0 are briefly described; in particular, attention is drawn to a family of spherical vortices with swirl (which is closely analogous to a known family of solutions of the equations of magnetostatics); the vortex lines of these flows are both knotted and linked.
Two related magnetohydrodynamic invariants discovered by Woltjer (1958a, b) are discussed in ±5.
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- © 1969 Cambridge University Press
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