Author:
BAEY JEAN-MICHEL,CARTON XAVIER
Abstract
The stability of elliptically perturbed circular vortices is investigated in a two-layer
shallow-water model, with constant background rotation. The fluid is bounded above
and below by rigid and at surfaces. The linear stability analysis shows that elliptical
perturbations are most unstable for moderate Burger numbers and vorticity
shears. Shorter waves dominate for more sheared vortices. Shallow-water and
quasi-geostrophic growth rates exhibit a striking similarity, except at each end of the Burger
number domain. There, cyclones (anticyclones) with finite Rossby numbers are more
(less) unstable than their quasi-geostrophic counterparts. A simple model gives a
first-order trend for this bias.Nonlinear model runs with initially perturbed vortices also show the similarity
between the two dynamics. In these runs, elliptically deformed vortices stabilize as
stationary rotating tripoles for moderate linear instability; on the other hand, strongly
unstable vortices break as dipoles. During these nonlinear processes, energy transfers
indicate that barotropic instability is at least as active as the baroclinic one. For tripole
formation, the modal analysis of the perturbation exhibits a dominant contribution
of the original wave and of the mean flow correction. The ageostrophic and divergent
parts of the flow are respectively weak and negligible. The Lighthill equation proves
that few internal gravity waves are generated during tripole formation or dipolar
breaking. Finally, the effects of triangular perturbations on circular vortices and the
formation of quadrupoles are briefly addressed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
44 articles.
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