| Literature DB >> 28576102 |
Alireza Hadjighasem1, Mohammad Farazmand1, Daniel Blazevski2, Gary Froyland3, George Haller4.
Abstract
We review and test twelve different approaches to the detection of finite-time coherent material structures in two-dimensional, temporally aperiodic flows. We consider both mathematical methods and diagnostic scalar fields, comparing their performance on three benchmark examples: the quasiperiodically forced Bickley jet, a two-dimensional turbulence simulation, and an observational wind velocity field from Jupiter's atmosphere. A close inspection of the results reveals that the various methods often produce very different predictions for coherent structures, once they are evaluated beyond heuristic visual assessment. As we find by passive advection of the coherent set candidates, false positives and negatives can be produced even by some of the mathematically justified methods due to the ineffectiveness of their underlying coherence principles in certain flow configurations. We summarize the inferred strengths and weaknesses of each method, and make general recommendations for minimal self-consistency requirements that any Lagrangian coherence detection technique should satisfy.Year: 2017 PMID: 28576102 DOI: 10.1063/1.4982720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chaos ISSN: 1054-1500 Impact factor: 3.642