Vector plot of the Lamb–Oseen vortex velocity field.Evolution of a Lamb–Oseen vortex in air in real time. Free-floating test particles reveal the velocity and vorticity pattern. (scale: image is 20 cm wide)
Mathematical description
Oseen looked for a solution for the Navier–Stokes equations in cylindrical coordinates with velocity components of the form
where is the circulation of the vortex core. Navier–Stokes equations lead to
which, subject to the conditions that it is regular at and becomes unity as , leads to[3]
where is the kinematic viscosity of the fluid. At , we have a potential vortex with concentrated vorticity at the -axis; and this vorticity diffuses away as time passes.
The only non-zero vorticity component is in the -direction, given by
The generalized Oseen vortex may be obtained by looking for solutions of the form
that leads to the equation
Self-similar solution exists for the coordinate , provided , where is a constant, in which case . The solution for may be written according to Rott (1958)[5] as
where is an arbitrary constant. For , the classical Lamb–Oseen vortex is recovered. The case corresponds to the axisymmetric stagnation point flow, where is a constant. When , , a Burgers vortex is a obtained. For arbitrary , the solution becomes , where is an arbitrary constant. As , Burgers vortex is recovered.
^Oseen, C. W. (1912). Uber die Wirbelbewegung in einer reibenden Flussigkeit. Ark. Mat. Astro. Fys., 7, 14–26.
^Saffman, P. G.; Ablowitz, Mark J.; J. Hinch, E.; Ockendon, J. R.; Olver, Peter J. (1992). Vortex dynamics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-47739-5. p. 253.
^Drazin, P. G., & Riley, N. (2006). The Navier–Stokes equations: a classification of flows and exact solutions (No. 334). Cambridge University Press.
^G.K. Batchelor (1967). An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics. Cambridge University Press.
^Rott, N. (1958). On the viscous core of a line vortex. Zeitschrift für angewandte Mathematik und Physik ZAMP, 9(5-6), 543–553.