"Vortices." . . "Motion." . . "Grids." . . "Computational fluid dynamics." . . "Numerical flow visualization." . . "Algorithms." . . "Cross sections." . . "Hilsch tubes." . . . . "Pressure distribution." . . "Flow fields." . . "Turbulent flow." . . . . . . . "Vortex Tubes in Turbulent Flows: Identification, Representation, Reconstruction"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "In many cases the structure of a fluid flow is well-characterized by its vortices, especially for the purpose of visualization. In this paper we present a new algorithm for identifying vortices in complex flows. The algorithm produces a skeleton line along the center of a vortex by using a two-step predictor-corrector scheme. The vorticity vector field serves as the predictor and the pressure gradient (in the perpendicular plane) serves as the corrector. We describe an economical description of the vortex tube's cross-section: a 5- term truncated Fourier series is generally sufficient, and it compresses the representation of the flow by a factor of 4000 or more. We reconstruct the vortex tubes as generalized cylinders, providing a polygonal mesh suitable for display on a graphics workstation. We show how the reconstructed geometry of vortex tubes can be enhanced to help visualize helical motion in a static image. Vortex, Visualization."@en . . . . . . . . . "Vortex tubes in turbulent flows identification, representation, reconstruction"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Vortex tubes in turbulent flows : identification, representation, reconstruction"@en . . . . . . . . . "Abstract: \"In many cases the structure of a fluid flow is well- characterized by its vortices, especially for the purpose of visualization. In this paper we present a new algorithm for identifying vortices in complex flows. The algorithm produces a skeleton line along the center of a vortex by using a two-step predictor-corrector scheme. The vorticity vector field serves as the predictor and the pressure gradient (in the perpendicular plane) serves as the corrector. We describe an economical description of the vortex tube's cross-section: a 5-term truncated Fourier series is generally sufficient, and it compresses the representation of the flow by a factor of 4000 or more. We reconstruct the vortex tubes as generalized cylinders, providing a polygonal mesh suitable for display on a graphics workstation. We show how the reconstructed geometry of vortex tubes can be enhanced to help visualize helical motion in a static image.\""@en . . . . "Statics." . . "Flow visualization." . . "Fluid Mechanics." . . "Image processing." . . "Pressure gradients." . . "Predictor-corrector methods." . . "Mesh." . . "Vorticity." . . "Fourier series." . .