Physics:Two-dimensional point vortex gas
The two-dimensional point vortex gas is a discrete particle model used to study turbulence in two-dimensional ideal fluids. The two-dimensional guiding-center plasma is a completely equivalent model used in plasma physics.
General setup
The model is a Hamiltonian system of N points in the two-dimensional plane executing the motion
- [math]\displaystyle{ k_i\frac{dx_i}{dt} = \frac{\partial H}{\partial y_i},\qquad k_i\frac{dy_i}{dt} = -\frac{\partial H}{\partial x_i}, }[/math]
(In the confined version of the problem, the logarithmic potential is modified.)
Interpretations
In the point-vortex gas interpretation, the particles represent either point vortices in a two-dimensional fluid, or parallel line vortices in a three-dimensional fluid. The constant ki is the circulation of the fluid around the ith vortex. The Hamiltonian H is the interaction term of the fluid's integrated kinetic energy; it may be either positive or negative. The equations of motion simply reflect the drift of each vortex's position in the velocity field of the other vortices.
In the guiding-center plasma interpretation, the particles represent long filaments of charge parallel to some external magnetic field. The constant ki is the linear charge density of the ith filament. The Hamiltonian H is just the two-dimensional Coulomb potential between lines. The equations of motion reflect the guiding center drift of the charge filaments, hence the name.
Notes
References
- Eyink, Gregory; Katepalli Sreenivasan (January 2006). "Onsager and the theory of hydrodynamic turbulence". Reviews of Modern Physics 78 (1): 87–135. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.78.87. Bibcode: 2006RvMP...78...87E.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-dimensional point vortex gas.
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