Author:
BALMFORTH N. J.,PICCOLO C.,UMURHAN O. M.
Abstract
This article continues an exploration of instabilities of jets in two-dimensional, inviscid
fluid on the beta-plane. At onset, for particular choices of the physical parameters,
the normal modes responsible for instability have critical levels that coalesce along
the axis of the jet. Matched asymptotic expansion (critical layer theory) is used to
derive a reduced model describing the dynamics of these modes. Because the velocity
profile is locally parabolic in the vicinity of the critical levels the dynamics is richer
than in standard critical layer problems. The model captures the inviscid saturation of
unstable modes, the excitation of neutral Rossby waves, and the decay of disturbances
when there are no discrete normal modes. Inviscid saturation occurs when the vorticity
distribution twists up into vortical structures that take the form of either a pair of
‘cat's eye’ patterns straddling the jet axis, or a single row of vortices. The addition
of weak viscosity destroys these cat's eye structures and causes the critical layer
to spread diffusively. The results are compared with numerical simulations of the
governing equations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
4 articles.
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