Batchelor vortex

In fluid dynamics, Batchelor vortices, first described by George Batchelor in a 1964 article, have been found useful in analyses of airplane vortex wake hazard problems.[1]

The model

The Batchelor vortex is an approximate solution to the Navier-Stokes equations obtained using a boundary layer approximation. The physical reasoning behind this approximation is the assumption that the axial gradient of the flow field of interest is of much smaller magnitude than the radial gradient.
The axial, radial and azimuthal velocity components of the vortex are denoted U,V and W respectively and can be represented in cylindrical coordinates (x,r, \theta) as follows:


\begin{array}{cl}
U(r) &= U_\infty + \frac{W_0}{(R/R_0)^2} e^{-(r/R)^2}, \\
V(r) &= 0, \\
W(r) &= qW_0 \frac{1-e^{-(r/R)^2}}{(r/R_0)}.
\end{array}

The parameters in the above equations are


Note that the radial component of the velocity is zero and that the axial and azimuthal components depend only on r.
We now write the system above in dimensionless form by scaling time by a factor R_0/W_0. Using the same symbols for the dimensionless variables, the Batchelor vortex can be expressed in terms of the dimensionless variables as


\left\lbrace \begin{array}{cl}
U(r) &= a + \displaystyle{\frac{1}{1+ 4t/Re} e^{-r^2/(1+ 4t/Re)}}, \\
V(r) &= 0, \\
W(r) &= q \displaystyle{\frac{1-e^{-r^2/(1+ 4t/Re)}}{r}},
\end{array}\right.

where a = U_\infty/W_0 denotes the free stream axial velocity and Re is the Reynolds number.

If one lets a = 0 and considers an infinitely large swirl number then the Batchelor vortex simplifies to the Lamb–Oseen vortex for the azimuthal velocity:

W_\Theta(r) = \frac{\Gamma}{2\pi r} \left ( 1-e^{-r^2/R_c^2} \right )

where  \Gamma is the circulation.

References

External links

Continuous spectra of the Batchelor vortex] (Authored by Xueri Mao and Spencer Sherwin and published by Imperial College London)


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