Bounds on the growth of the support of a vortex path
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1908827
DOI10.1007/BF02101489zbMath0839.76010MaRDI QIDQ1908827
Publication date: 7 March 1996
Published in: Communications in Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
35Q35: PDEs in connection with fluid mechanics
76B47: Vortex flows for incompressible inviscid fluids
35Q30: Navier-Stokes equations
Related Items
Long Time Evolution of Concentrated Euler Flows with Planar Symmetry, Two Dimensional Incompressible Ideal Flow Around a Small Obstacle, On the Growth of the Vorticity Support for an Incompressible Non-viscous Fluid in a Two-dimensional Exterior Domain, Confinement of vorticity in two dimensional ideal incompressible exterior flow, Self-similar point vortices and confinement of vorticity, On Singular Vortex Patches, I: Well-posedness Issues, Filamentation near Hill’s vortex, The asymptotic behavior of the smooth solutions of the Euler equations in \(R^2\), On the evolution of an angle in a vortex patch, Confinement of vorticity for the 2D Euler-\(\alpha\) equations, On the large-time behavior of two-dimensional vortex dynamics, A confinement result on a quasi-geostrophic flow in the \(f\)-plane, From point vortices to vortex patches in self-similar expanding configurations, On the estimate of distance traveled by a particle in a disk-like vortex patch, On the growth of the support of positive vorticity for 2D Euler equation in an infinite cylinder, A confinement result for axisymmetric fluids, Asymptotic behavior of vortices in axisymmetric flow without swirl, Stability in 𝐿¹ of circular vortex patches
Cites Work
- Some considerations on the nonlinear stability of stationary planar Euler flows
- Nonlinear stability of circular vortex patches
- Euler evolution for singular initial data and vortex theory: A global solution
- Mathematical theory of incompressible nonviscous fluids
- Vortices and localization in Euler flows
- Nonlinear stability bounds for inviscid, two-dimensional, parallel or circular flows with monotonic vorticity, and the analogous three-dimensional quasi-geostrophic flows