Publication! – Knot Spectrum of Turbulence

After lots of hard work we finally managed to publish our recent results on knotting in superfluid turbulence. This was based on the work I did during my MMATH where I wrote a code which computed the Alexander polynomial of various knots.

Cooper, R.G., Mezgarnezhad, M., Baggaley, A.W. and Barenghi, C.F. (2019), Knot spectrum of turbulence, Scientific Reports, 9, 10545

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-47103-w

Streamlines, vortex lines and magnetic flux tubes in turbulent fluids and plasmas display a great amount of coiling, twisting and linking, raising the question as to whether their topological complexity (continually created and destroyed by reconnections) can be quantified. In superfluid helium, the discrete (quantized) nature of vorticity can be exploited to associate to each vortex loop a knot invariant called the Alexander polynomial whose degree characterizes the topology of that vortex loop. By numerically simulating the dynamics of a tangle of quantum vortex lines, we find that this quantum turbulence always contains vortex knots of very large degree which keep forming, vanishing and reforming, creating a distribution of topologies which we quantify in terms of a knot spectrum and its scaling law. We also find results analogous to those in the wider literature, demonstrating that the knotting probability of the vortex tangle grows with the vortex length, as for macromolecules, and saturates above a characteristic length, as found for tumbled strings.

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