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The structure and stability of vortex rings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

T. Maxworthy
Affiliation:
Departments of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.

Abstract

A series of observations on experimentally produced vortex rings is described. The flow field, ring velocity and growth rate were observed using dye and hydrogen-bubble techniques. It was found that stable rings are formed and grow in such a way that most of their vorticity is distributed throughout a fluid volume which is larger than and moving with the visible dye core.

As the vorticity diffuses out of this moving body of fluid into the outer irrotational fluid, it has two effects. It causes some of the fluid, with newly acquired vorticity, to be entrained into the interior of the bubble, while the rest is left behind and accounts for the appearance of ring vorticity in a wake. It was found that the velocity of translation U of these stable rings varies as t−1, at high Reynolds number, where t is the time measured from the start of the motion at a virtual origin at downstream infinity. A simple theoretical model is presented which explains all of these features of the observed stable flow. Rings of even higher Reynolds number become unstable and shed significantly more vorticity into the wake. Under some circumstances a new more stable vortex emerges from this shedding process and continues with less vorticity than before. Eventually, the ring motion ceases as all of its vorticity is deposited into the wake and is spread by viscous diffusion. Observations of the interaction between two nearly identical rings travelling a common path showed that, contrary to popular belief, rings do not pass back and forth through one another, but that the rearward one becomes entrained into the forward one. Only when the rearward ring has a much higher velocity than its partner can it emerge from the joining process and leave a slower-moving ring behind.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1972 Cambridge University Press

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