AbstractStirring a two-dimensional viscous fluid with rods is often an effective way to mix. The topological features of periodic rod motions give a lower bound on the topological entropy of the induced flow map, since material lines must ‘catch’ on the rods. But how good is this lower bound? We present examples from numerical simulations and speculate on what affects the ‘gap’ between the lower bound and the measured topological entropy. The key is the sign of the rod motion's action on first homology of the orientation double cover of the punctured disk
AbstractThis paper describes topological kinematics associated with the stirring by rods of a two-di...
Topological techniques are used to study the motions of systems of point vortices in the infinite pl...
We introduce a concept of measure-theoretic entropy for flows and study its invariance under measure...
Stirring a two-dimensional viscous fluid with rods is often an effective way to mix. The topological...
From the stirring of dye in viscous fluids to the availability of essential nutrients spreading over...
Topologically chaotic fluid advection is examined in two-dimensional flows with either or both direc...
We present a simple method to efficiently compute a lower limit of the topological entropy and its s...
Topological entropy measures the number of distinguishable orbits in a dynamical system, thereby qua...
Topological chaos relies on the periodic motion of obstacles in a two-dimensional flow in order to f...
This paper describes topological kinematics associated with the stirring by rods of a two-dimensiona...
A stirring device consisting of a periodic motion of rods induces a mapping of the fluid domain to i...
Low-dimensional topologists have long studied transformations of surfaces such as the double-torus: ...
We study here a method for estimating the topological entropy of a smooth dynamical system. Our meth...
Fluctuation theorems specify the non-zero probability to observe negative entropy production, contra...
We combine the trellis method and the braid method, and by estimating the lower bounds of the topolo...
AbstractThis paper describes topological kinematics associated with the stirring by rods of a two-di...
Topological techniques are used to study the motions of systems of point vortices in the infinite pl...
We introduce a concept of measure-theoretic entropy for flows and study its invariance under measure...
Stirring a two-dimensional viscous fluid with rods is often an effective way to mix. The topological...
From the stirring of dye in viscous fluids to the availability of essential nutrients spreading over...
Topologically chaotic fluid advection is examined in two-dimensional flows with either or both direc...
We present a simple method to efficiently compute a lower limit of the topological entropy and its s...
Topological entropy measures the number of distinguishable orbits in a dynamical system, thereby qua...
Topological chaos relies on the periodic motion of obstacles in a two-dimensional flow in order to f...
This paper describes topological kinematics associated with the stirring by rods of a two-dimensiona...
A stirring device consisting of a periodic motion of rods induces a mapping of the fluid domain to i...
Low-dimensional topologists have long studied transformations of surfaces such as the double-torus: ...
We study here a method for estimating the topological entropy of a smooth dynamical system. Our meth...
Fluctuation theorems specify the non-zero probability to observe negative entropy production, contra...
We combine the trellis method and the braid method, and by estimating the lower bounds of the topolo...
AbstractThis paper describes topological kinematics associated with the stirring by rods of a two-di...
Topological techniques are used to study the motions of systems of point vortices in the infinite pl...
We introduce a concept of measure-theoretic entropy for flows and study its invariance under measure...