In vector calculus, a Beltrami vector field, named after Eugenio Beltrami, is a vector field in three dimensions that is parallel to its own curl. That is, F is a Beltrami vector field provided that
Thus
F
\nabla x F
\nabla x F=λF
If
F
\nabla ⋅ F=0
\nabla x (\nabla x F)\equiv-\nabla2F+\nabla(\nabla ⋅ F)
\nabla x (\nabla x F)\equiv-\nabla2F
λ
Beltrami vector fields with nonzero curl correspond to Euclidean contact forms in three dimensions.
The vector fieldis a multiple of the standard contact structure −z i + j, and furnishes an example of a Beltrami vector field.
Beltrami fields with a constant proportionality factor are a distinct category of vector fields that act as eigenfunctions of the curl operator. In essence, they are functions that map points in a three-dimensional space, either in
R3
T3
u:R3\toR3
u:T3\toT3
These vector fields are unique due to the special relationship between the curl of the vector field
u
\nabla x u=λu
In this equation,
λ
u
Beltrami fields are relevant in fluid dynamics, as they offer a classical family of stationary solutions to the Euler equation in three dimensions.[1] The Euler equations describe the motion of an ideal, incompressible fluid and can be written as a system of two equations:
\begin{cases} \dfrac{\partialu}{\partialt}+(u ⋅ \nabla)u=-\nablap,\\ \nabla ⋅ u=0. \end{cases}
u
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=0
B:=p+
1 | |
2 |
\lVertu\rVert2
\omega:=\nabla x u
\begin{cases} u x \omega=\nablaB,\\ \nabla ⋅ u=0. \end{cases}
(u ⋅ \nabla)u
(u ⋅ \nabla)u=
1 | |
2 |
\nabla\lVertu\rVert2-u x (\nabla x u)
When the Bernoulli function
B
Beltrami fields have a close connection to Lagrangian turbulence, as shown by V.I. Arnold's work on stationary Euler flows.[2]
Arnold's quote from his aforementioned work highlights the probable complicated topology of the streamlines in Beltrami fields, drawing parallels with celestial mechanics:
Il est probable que les écoulements tels que rot,\nu=λ\nu
, ont des lignes de courant à la topologie compliquée. De telles complications interviennent en mécanique céleste. La topologie des lignes de courant des écoulements stationnaires des fluides visqueux peut être semblable à celle de mécanique céleste.λ=Cte
A recent paper[3] demonstrates that Beltrami fields exhibit chaotic regions and invariant tori of complex topologies with high probability. The analysis includes asymptotic bounds for the number of horseshoes, zeros, and knotted invariant tori, alongside periodic trajectories in Gaussian random Beltrami fields.