Articles via Databases
Articles via Journals
Online Catalog
E-books
Research & Information Literacy
Interlibrary loan
Theses & Dissertations
Collections
Policies
Services
About / Contact Us
Administration
Littman Architecture Library
This site will be removed in January 2019, please change your bookmarks.
This page will redirect to https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/dissertations/1491/ in 5 seconds

The New Jersey Institute of Technology's
Electronic Theses & Dissertations Project

Title: Dances and escape of the vortex quartet
Author: Behring, Brandon
View Online: njit-etd2020-058
(xvi, 148 pages ~ 85.1 MB pdf)
Department: Department of Mathematical Sciences
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy
Program: Mathematical Sciences
Document Type: Dissertation
Advisory Committee: Goodman, Roy (Committee chair)
Blackmore, Denis L. (Committee member)
Siegel, Michael (Committee member)
Kevrekidis, Panayotis G. (Committee member)
Moore, Richard O. (Committee member)
Date: 2020-12
Keywords: Chaotic systems
Dynamical systems
Hamiltonian dynamics
Non-linear dynamics
Point-vortex motion
Availability: Unrestricted
Abstract:

This dissertation considers the linear stability of a one-parameter family of periodic solutions of the four-vortex problem known as 'leapfrogging' orbits. These solutions, which consist of two pairs of identical yet oppositely-signed vortices, were known to W. Gröbli (1877) and A. E. H. Love (1883) and can be parameterized by a dimensionless parameter related to the geometry of the initial configuration. Simulations by Acheson and numerical Floquet analysis by Tophøj and Aref both indicate, to many digits, that the bifurcation occurs at a value related to the inverse square of the golen ratio. Acheson observed that, after an initial period of aperiodic leapfrogging, the perturbed solutions could transition into one of two behaviors: a bounded orbit he called `\emph{walkabout}' and an unbounded orbit he called “disintegration”.' In the walkabout orbit, two like-signed vortices couple together, and the motion resembles a three-vortex system. In disintegration, four vortices separate into two pairs---each pair consisting one negative and one positive vortex---that escape to infinity along two transverse rays.

Two goals are addressed in this dissertation:Goal 1: To rigorously demonstrate, without numerics, the exact algebraic value for which the Hamiltonian pitchfork bifurcation occurs. Goal 2:Understand how, as the parameter is decreased, the dynamics transitions between the various regimes and escape become first possible and then almost inevitable, as well as identifying the structures in phase-space that are responsible for the transition between these regimes.


If you have any questions please contact the ETD Team, libetd@njit.edu.

 
ETD Information
Digital Commons @ NJIT
Theses and DIssertations
ETD Policies & Procedures
ETD FAQ's
ETD home

Request a Scan
NDLTD

NJIT's ETD project was given an ACRL/NJ Technology Innovation Honorable Mention Award in spring 2003