The life of a vortex knot (in experiment)

ORAL

Abstract

In recent experiments on linked and knotted vortices in classical fluids, we have found that they undergo a spontaneous change in topology: they untie themselves through a series of local reconnections. This outcome is at odds with the notion that fluid helicity (knottedness) should be conserved, as it should be for a dissipation-less fluid. Remarkably similar behavior is found for simulations of superfluid knots using the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We will discuss our search for the missing helicity and the possibility of a universal driving mechanism for reconnections in topological vortices.

*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Materials Research and Engineering Centers (MRSEC) Program at the University of Chicago (DMR-0820054) and the Packard Foundation through a Packard fellowship.

Authors

  • Dustin Kleckner

    • University of Chicago
  • Martin Scheeler

    • University of Chicago
  • Davide Proment

    • University of East Anglia
  • William Irvine

    • University of Chicago