Hill's Spherical Vortex
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Hill's spherical vortex is an exact solution of the Euler equations that is commonly used to model a vortex ring. The solution is also used to model the velocity distribution inside a spherical drop of one fluid moving at a constant velocity through another fluid at small Reynolds number. The vortex is named after
Micaiah John Muller Hill Micaiah John Muller Hill FRS (1856–1929) was an English mathematician, known for Hill's spherical vortex and Hill's tetrahedra. He was born on 22 February 1856 in Bengal, India, the son of Revd. Samuel John Hill (1825–1881) and Leonora Jo ...
who discovered the exact solution in 1894. The two-dimensional analogue of this vortex is the
Lamb–Chaplygin dipole The Lamb–Chaplygin dipole model is a mathematical description for a particular inviscid and steady dipolar vortex flow. It is a non-trivial solution to the two-dimensional Euler equations. The model is named after Horace Lamb and Sergey Alexeyev ...
. The solution is described in the spherical polar coordinates system (r,\theta,\phi) with corresponding velocity components (v_r,v_\theta,0). The velocity components are identified from
Stokes stream function In fluid dynamics, the Stokes stream function is used to describe the streamlines and flow velocity in a three-dimensional incompressible flow with axisymmetry. A surface with a constant value of the Stokes stream function encloses a streamtube, ...
\psi(r,\theta) as follows :v_r = \frac\frac, \quad v_\theta = - \frac\frac. The Hill's spherical vortex is described by : \psi=\begin-\frac \left(1-\frac\right) r^2\sin^2\theta \quad \text \quad r\leq a\\ \frac \left(1 - \frac\right)r^2\sin^2\theta \quad \text \quad r\geq a \end where U is a constant freestream velocity far away from the origin and a is the radius of the sphere within which the vorticity is non-zero. For r\geq a, the vorticity is zero and the solution described above in that range is nothing but the potential flow past a sphere of radius a. The only non-zero vorticity component for r\leq a is the azimuthal component that is given by :\omega_\phi = -\frac r\sin\theta. Note that here the parameters U and a can be scaled out by non-dimensionalization.


Hill's spherical vortex with a swirling motion

The Hill's spherical vortex with a swirling motion is provided by Keith Moffatt in 1969. Earlier discussion of similar problems are provided by
William Mitchinson Hicks William Mitchinson Hicks, FRS (23 September 1850, in Launceston, Cornwall – 17 August 1934, in Crowhurst, Sussex) was a British mathematician and physicist. He studied at St John's College, Cambridge, graduating in 1873, and became a Fello ...
in 1899. The solution was also discovered by Kelvin H. Pendergast in 1956, in the context of plasma physics, as there exists a direct connection between these fluid flows and plasma physics (see the connection between
Hicks equation In fluid dynamics, Hicks equation, sometimes also referred as Bragg–Hawthorne equation or Squire–Long equation, is a partial differential equation that describes the distribution of stream function for axisymmetric inviscid fluid, named after Wi ...
and
Grad–Shafranov equation The Grad–Shafranov equation ( H. Grad and H. Rubin (1958); Vitalii Dmitrievich Shafranov (1966)) is the equilibrium equation in ideal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) for a two dimensional plasma, for example the axisymmetric toroidal plasma in a tokam ...
). The motion (v_r,v_\theta) in the axial (or, meridional) plane is described by the Stokes stream function \psi as before. The azimuthal motion v_\phi is given by :v_\phi = \frac where : \psi=\begin -\frac\frac\left left(\frac\right)^\frac-1\rightr^2\sin^2\theta \quad \text \quad r\leq a\\ \frac \left(1 - \frac\right)r^2\sin^2\theta \quad \text \quad r\geq a \end where J_ and J_ are the
Bessel functions Bessel functions, first defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli and then generalized by Friedrich Bessel, are canonical solutions of Bessel's differential equation x^2 \frac + x \frac + \left(x^2 - \alpha^2 \right)y = 0 for an arbitrary ...
of the first kind. Unlike the Hill's spherical vortex without any swirling motion, the problem here contains an arbitrary parameter ka. A general class of solutions of the Euler's equation describing propagating three-dimensional vortices without change of shape is provided by Keith Moffatt in 1986.Moffatt, H. K. (1986). On the existence of localized rotational disturbances which propagate without change of structure in an inviscid fluid. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 173, 289–302.


References

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