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Viscous and inviscid reconnection of vortex rings on logarithmic lattices

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2025

Abhishek Harikrishnan*
Affiliation:
CEA, CNRS, SPEC, Université Paris-Saclay , Gif-sur-Yvette 91191, France
Adrien Lopez
Affiliation:
CEA, CNRS, SPEC, Université Paris-Saclay , Gif-sur-Yvette 91191, France
Bérengère Dubrulle
Affiliation:
CEA, CNRS, SPEC, Université Paris-Saclay , Gif-sur-Yvette 91191, France
*
Corresponding author: Abhishek Harikrishnan, abhishek.paraswararharikrishnan@cea.fr

Abstract

To address the possible occurrence of a finite-time singularity during the oblique reconnection of two vortex rings, (Moffatt and Kimura 2019, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 870, R1) developed a simplified model based on the Biot–Savart law and claimed that the vorticity amplification $\omega _{{max}}/\omega _0$ becomes very large for vortex Reynolds number $Re_{\varGamma } \geqslant 4000$. However, with direct numerical simulations (DNS), Yao and Hussain (2020a, J. Fluid Mech.vol. 888, pp. R2) were able to show that the vorticity amplification is in fact much smaller and increases slowly with $Re_{\varGamma }$. This suppression of vorticity was linked to two key factors – deformation of the vortex core during approach, and formation of hairpin-like bridge structures. In this work, a recently developed numerical technique called log-lattice (Campolina & Mailybaev, 2021, Nonlinearity, vol. 34, 4684), where interacting Fourier modes are logarithmically sampled, is applied to the same oblique vortex ring interaction problem. It is shown that the log-lattice vortex reconnection displays core compression and formation of bridge structures, similar to the actual reconnection seen with DNS. Furthermore, the sparsity of the Fourier modes allows us to probe very large $Re_{\varGamma } = 10^8$ until which the peak of the maximum norm of vorticity, while increasing with $Re_{\varGamma }$, remains finite, and a blow-up is observed only for the inviscid case.

Information

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JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press or the rights holder(s) must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. (a) Schematic of the initial configuration. Figure adapted from YH. (b) Visualisation of vortex rings from log-lattices for the Kida-type ring with $\delta _0/R = 0.2$ with the spacing factor $\lambda = \phi$. (c) As in (b) for $\lambda \approx 1.237$. The Q-criterion isosurfaces on grid size $128^3$ are plotted at $\text{Q} \gt 0.35\, \text{Q}_{{max}}$ and $\text{Q} \gt 0.3\, \text{Q}_{{max}}$, respectively.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Q-criterion isosurfaces shaded with contours of axial vorticity at $t = 0.01, 0.12, 0.2, 0.225$. The shaded region with the colour map is the small box indicated in figure 1(b) thresholded at $\text{Q} \gt 0.1\text{Q}_{{max}}$. Other regions are uniformly shaded with $30\,\%$ opacity and thresholded at $\text{Q} \gt 0.08\text{Q}_{{max}}$.

Figure 2

Figure 3. (a,b) Alternate camera angles of figures 2(b) and 2(c), respectively, with the former emphasising the flattening of the vortex cores, and the latter showing the threads formed during the reconnection process.

Figure 3

Figure 4. (ad) Temporal evolution of the vortex core shape is shown with contours of axial vorticity with level sets $\omega _y = [0.75{-}0.99]\,\omega _{y, {max}}$ in the symmetric $(x,z)$ plane for the Kida-type ring at $Re_{\varGamma } = 10^4$. (eh) Contours of axial vorticity at $t = 0.115$ and level sets $\omega _y = [0.85{-}0.99]\,\omega _{y, {max}}$ are shown in the symmetric $(x,z)$ plane for the MK-type ring for increasing $Re_{\varGamma }$.

Figure 4

Figure 5. The dark green shaded regions are structures of $[A_{\textit{ij}}]_+$ at times (a) $t = 0.2$, (b) $t = 0.225$, thresholded at $[A_{\textit{ij}}]_+ \gt 0.5[A_{\textit{ij}}]_{+, {max}}$. Other regions shaded uniformly at $30\,\%$ opacity are Q-criterion structures at $\text{Q} \gt 0.08\text{Q}_{{max}}$.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Q-criterion structures similar to figure 3(b) filtered up to $k_h$ in the inertial range (a) $\|\boldsymbol{k}\|_\infty \lt 30$ for $\lambda = \phi$, (b) $\|\boldsymbol{k}\|_\infty \lt 40$ for $\lambda \approx 1.237$.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Time evolution of the energy spectrum for the Kida case at $Re = 10^4$ with $\boldsymbol{k}_i = 0$ modes and $\lambda = \phi$. The $y$ direction shows wavenumbers up to $k_{{max}}$ for this simulation. The contour lines represent level sets of the function $\log E(|\boldsymbol{k}|, t)$.

Figure 7

Figure 8. (a) The black and red lines show the vortex lines at $t = 0, 0.167$, respectively. (b) Temporal evolution of $\kappa _0^2/\kappa ^2(t)$ for the Kida case at $Re = 10^4$ and $\lambda = \phi$.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Temporal evolution of (a) circulation $\varGamma _y, \varGamma _z$ normalised by the total circulation $\varGamma = \varGamma _y + \varGamma _z$ along the symmetric $(x, z)$ plane shaded black, and collision $(x,y)$ plane shaded cyan, respectively. (b) The separation distance $s_0$ is shown for both the Kida-type (solid line) and MK-type (dashed line) rings at $Re_{\varGamma } = 10^4$.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Time evolution of (a,d) total enstrophy $\mathcal{E}$, (b,e) maximum norm of vorticity $\| \omega \| _{\infty }$, and (c,f) kinetic energy spectrum at peak enstrophy for increasing Reynolds numbers, for (a–c) Kida-type rings and (d–f) MK-type rings. Here, $Re_{\varGamma } = 5\times10^3, 10^4, 10^5, 10^6, 10^7, 10^8, \infty $ are shaded red, maroon, green, cyan, blue, violet and black, respectively.

Figure 10

Figure 11. Time evolution of enstrophy for the Kida-type ring (a) with and without the $\boldsymbol{k}_i = 0$ modes and $\lambda = \phi$, (b) with different $\lambda$ along with the $\boldsymbol{k}_i = 0$ modes.

Figure 11

Table 1. Initial and final grid sizes, and time taken, for some cases of the log-lattice simulation. Bold font indicates simulations performed with the $\boldsymbol{k}_i = 0$ modes. The CPU time indicates the time taken for the convolution operation (2.3) at the last time step of the simulation. The simulation at $Re_{\varGamma } = 10^4$ with $\boldsymbol{k}_i = 0$ is examined in detail in § 3.1.

Figure 12

Figure 12. (a) Temporal evolution of total enstrophy $\mathcal{E}$ (maroon thick solid line) and component-wise enstrophy corresponding to each coordinate direction $\mathcal{E}_1, \mathcal{E}_2, \mathcal{E}_3$ (black solid, dotted and dashed lines, respectively). (b,c) Initial condition for the head-on collision of vortex rings oriented along the diagonal of the computational domain visualised at different angles. (df) Evolution of head-on collision at $t = 0.127, 0.204, 0.324$. All visualisations show Q-criterion isosurfaces thresholded at $\text{Q} \gt 0.4\text{Q}_{{max}}$.

Supplementary material: File

Harikrishnan et al. supplementary movie

Oblique reconnection of vortex rings on log-lattices at Re = 104 with/without ki = 0 modes.
Download Harikrishnan et al. supplementary movie(File)
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