Abstract

Approximate streamsurfaces of a three-dimensional velocity field have recently been constructed as isosurfaces of the closest first integral of the velocity field. Such approximate streamsurfaces enable effective and efficient visualization of vortical regions in three-dimensional flows. Here we propose a variational construction of these approximate streamsurfaces to remove the limitation of Fourier series representation of the first integral in earlier work. Specifically, we use finite-element methods to solve a partial differential equation that describes the best approximate first integral for a given velocity field. We use several examples to demonstrate the power of our approach for three-dimensional flows in domains with arbitrary geometries and boundary conditions. These include generalized axisymmetric flows in the domains of a sphere (spherical vortex), a cylinder (cylindrical vortex) and a hollow cylinder (Taylor–Couette flow) as benchmark studies for various computational domains, non-integrable periodic flows (ABC and Euler flows) and Rayleigh–Bénard convection flows. We also illustrate the use of the variational construction in extracting momentum barriers in Rayleigh–Bénard convection.

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