What is Helicity: Definition and 62 Discussions

This page is about helicity in fluid dynamics. For helicity of magnetic fields, see magnetic helicity. For helicity in particle physics, see helicity (particle physics).In fluid dynamics, helicity is, under appropriate conditions, an invariant of the Euler equations of fluid flow, having a topological interpretation as a measure of linkage and/or knottedness of vortex lines in the flow. This was first proved by Jean-Jacques Moreau in 1961 and Moffatt derived it in 1969 without the knowledge of Moreau's paper. This helicity invariant is an extension of Woltjer's theorem for magnetic helicity.
Let




u

(
x
,
t
)


{\displaystyle \mathbf {u} (x,t)}
be the velocity field and




×

u



{\displaystyle \nabla \times \mathbf {u} }
the corresponding vorticity field. Under the following three conditions, the vortex lines are transported with (or 'frozen in') the flow: (i) the fluid is inviscid; (ii) either the flow is incompressible (






u

=
0


{\displaystyle \nabla \cdot \mathbf {u} =0}
), or it is compressible with a barotropic relation



p
=
p
(
ρ
)


{\displaystyle p=p(\rho )}
between pressure



p


{\displaystyle p}
and density



ρ


{\displaystyle \rho }
; and (iii) any body forces acting on the fluid are conservative. Under these conditions, any closed surface



S


{\displaystyle S}
on which



n

(

×

u

)
=
0


{\displaystyle n\cdot (\nabla \times \mathbf {u} )=0}
is, like vorticity, transported with the flow.
Let



V


{\displaystyle V}
be the volume inside such a surface. Then the helicity in



H


{\displaystyle H}
is defined by




H
=



V



u



(


×

u


)


d
V

.


{\displaystyle H=\int _{V}\mathbf {u} \cdot \left(\nabla \times \mathbf {u} \right)\,dV\;.}
For a localised vorticity distribution in an unbounded fluid,



V


{\displaystyle V}
can be taken to be the whole space, and



H


{\displaystyle H}
is then the total helicity of the flow.



H


{\displaystyle H}
is invariant precisely because the vortex lines are frozen in the flow and their linkage and/or knottedness is therefore conserved, as recognized by Lord Kelvin (1868). Helicity is a pseudo-scalar quantity: it changes sign under change from a right-handed to a left-handed frame of reference; it can be considered as a measure of the handedness (or chirality) of the flow. Helicity is one of the four known integral invariants of the Euler equations; the other three are energy, momentum and angular momentum.
For two linked unknotted vortex tubes having circulations




κ

1




{\displaystyle \kappa _{1}}
and




κ

2




{\displaystyle \kappa _{2}}
, and no internal twist, the helicity is given by



H
=
±
2
n

κ

1



κ

2




{\displaystyle H=\pm 2n\kappa _{1}\kappa _{2}}
, where



n


{\displaystyle n}
is the Gauss linking number of the two tubes, and the plus or minus is chosen according as the linkage is right- or left-handed.
For a single knotted vortex tube with circulation



κ


{\displaystyle \kappa }
, then, as shown by Moffatt & Ricca (1992), the helicity is given by



H
=

κ

2


(
W
r
+
T
w
)


{\displaystyle H=\kappa ^{2}(Wr+Tw)}
, where



W
r


{\displaystyle Wr}
and



T
w


{\displaystyle Tw}
are the writhe and twist of the tube; the sum



W
r
+
T
w


{\displaystyle Wr+Tw}
is known to be invariant under continuous deformation of the tube.
The invariance of helicity provides an essential cornerstone of the subject topological fluid dynamics and magnetohydrodynamics, which is concerned with global properties of flows and their topological characteristics.

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  1. G

    Chirality vs Helicity: Explaining the Difference

    What is the difference between chirality and helicity? I know, that helicity shows the handedness of the particle. For example, we have a right-handed electron if its spin is aligned in the direction of its propagation. The concept of chirality is a bit similar to that of helicity, but something...
  2. V

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    Please look at the attach file. If we take case a) it proves the C and P are independly violated (neutrinos are left handed) The component of spin along the direction of motion is: -1 for the photon (bosons can have spin + or - 1) -1/2 for the neutrino (fermions can have spin + or -...
  3. B

    Helicity (as related to photons and Z-bosons)

    Ahoy maties, I understand that spin 'direction' relates to helicity, bosons have integral spin (-1, 0, 1, 2, etc) and that photons and Z-bosons are unique in that they are 'their own antiparticles'. With this context, I have 2 question strings (so I don't have to post multiple times)...
  4. J

    Question about the helicity operator

    In relativistic quantum field theory the Dirac spinors can be chosen to be eigenstates of the helicity operator \vec{\Sigma}\cdot \vec{p} /|\vec{p}|. I want to show that \vec{\Sigma}\cdot \vec{a} commutes with the Dirac Hamiltonian only if \vec{a}\propto \vec{p}. As usual I'm using Einstein...
  5. M

    Helicity violation in strong interaction?

    I have a proton and an antiproton scattering, via a pion exchange. The matrix element has the form: M=g*(\bar{u}_{1}\gamma ^{5}u_{2})\frac {1} {q^2-m^2}( \bar{v}_{1}\gamma ^{5}v_2) Wher g is my coupling constant, and q the 4-momentum of the pion. The problem is that when I compute the...
  6. L

    On the helicity of the electrons

    Does someone know what the measured probability of finding a right handed electron in the beta decay is?
  7. J

    Understanding Neutrino Helicity and Chirality: The Difference Explained

    When it was in the news about neutrinos having mass, I wondered what that meant about left-handed only-ness. You could catch up to one and pass it, or slow one down. More recently, I read that the helicity of the neutrino is invariant but the chirality can still change. What is the...
  8. N

    Finding "R. Gastmans, Ubiquitous Photon: Helicity Method for QED and QCD"

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  9. Mk

    Understanding Helicity in Quantum Mechanics: Explained by a Scientist

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  10. R

    Photon had a non-zero rest mass, based on measured helicity values?

    Hi, got an exam tomorrow for particle physics and need a question answered concerning helicity. How would it be possible to determine if a photon had a non-zero rest mass, based on measured helicity values? Thanks Ray
  11. Antonio Lao

    The originator of magnetic helicity?

    Who is the person that started the concept of magnetic helicity? Is it Gauss? Is it Woltjer? I was trying to obtain a copy of Woltjer's paper of 1958 Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 44 480. Can anybody help me get a copy of this paper? I did purchased a paper by Mitchell A. Berger called "Introduction...
  12. A

    Helicity and Clebsch decomposition

    It is well-known that using the Clebsch decomposition of a velocity field, the helicity contained in an any closed vortex tube is zero. Does the converse hold? That is, given zero helicity in any closed vortex tube, does this imply that the velocity field has a Clebsch decomposition?
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