Critical Solutions of Three Vortex Motion in the Parabolic Case
Lu Ting, Omar Knio, Denis Blackmore

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the global dynamics of three vortex motion in the parabolic case, demonstrating that vortex coalescence is an almost impossible event, thus extending previous local stability results.
Contribution
It offers a complete description of the vortex configurations near the critical curve C, filling gaps in the understanding of vortex coalescence in the parabolic case.
Findings
Vortex coalescence is almost never observed.
Stable and unstable families of vortex configurations are characterized.
Global dynamics near the critical curve C are fully described.
Abstract
Grobli (1877) laid the foundation for the analysis of the motion of three point vortices in a plane by deriving governing equations for triangular configurations of the vortices. Synge (1949) took this formulation one step further to that of a similar triangle of unit perimeter, via trilinear coordinates. The final reduced problem is governed by an integrable two-dimensional system of differential equations with solutions represented as planar trajectories. Another key to Synge's analysis was his classification of the problem into three distinct cases: elliptic, hyperbolic and parabolic corresponding, respectively, to the sum of products of pairs of vortex strengths being positive, negative or zero. The reduction of the vortex configuration, a curve in space to a planar curve is one-to-one, except along a critical planar curve C in the parabolic case. Each point on C represents a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid dynamics and aerodynamics studies · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
