Volume Transport by a 3D Quasigeostrophic Heton
Adhithiya Sivakumar, Jeffrey B. Weiss

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how three-dimensional hetons, modeled as counter-rotating vortex pairs, influence fluid transport in oceanic flows, revealing bifurcation-driven structures and scaling laws for trapped volumes.
Contribution
It develops a detailed Hamiltonian framework for 3D hetons, classifies configurations, and derives scaling laws for trapped volume, supported by numerical verification.
Findings
Vertically aligned hetons do not transport fluid.
Horizontal hetons' trapped volume scales as Y^3.
Tilted hetons' trapped volume scales as Z^4/Y.
Abstract
Oceanic flows self-organize into coherent vortices which strongly influence their transport and mixing properties. Counter-rotating vortex pairs can travel long distances and carry trapped fluid as they move. These structures are often modeled as hetons, viz. counter-rotating quasigeostrophic point vortex pairs with equal circulations. Here, we investigate the structure of the transport induced by a single three-dimensional heton. The transport is determined by the Hamiltonian structure of the velocity field induced by the heton's component vortices. The dynamics displays a sequence of bifurcations as one moves through the heton-induced velocity field in height. These bifurcations create and destroy unstable fixed points whose associated invariant manifolds bound the trapped volume. Heton configurations fall into three categories. Vertically aligned hetons do not move and do not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
