Author:
POTYLITSIN P. G.,PELTIER W. R.
Abstract
We investigate the influence of the ellipticity of a columnar vortex in a rotating
environment on its linear stability to three-dimensional perturbations. As a model of
the basic-state vorticity distribution, we employ the Stuart steady-state solution of
the Euler equations. In the presence of background rotation, an anticyclonic vortex
column is shown to be strongly destabilized to three-dimensional perturbations when
background rotation is weak, while rapid rotation strongly stabilizes both anticyclonic
and cyclonic columns, as might be expected on the basis of the Taylor–Proudman
theorem. We demonstrate that there exist three distinct forms of three-dimensional
instability to which strong anticyclonic vortices are subject. One form consists of a
Coriolis force modified form of the ‘elliptical’ instability, which is dominant for vortex
columns whose cross-sections are strongly elliptical. This mode was recently discussed
by Potylitsin & Peltier (1998) and Leblanc & Cambon (1998). The second form of
instability may be understood to constitute a three-dimensional inertial (centrifugal)
mode, which becomes the dominant mechanism of instability as the ellipticity of the
vortex column decreases. Also evident in the Stuart model of the vorticity distribution
is a third ‘hyperbolic’ mode of instability that is focused on the stagnation point that
exists between adjacent vortex cores. Although this short-wavelength cross-stream
mode is much less important in the spectrum of the Stuart model than it is in the
case of a true homogeneous mixing layer, it nevertheless does exist even though its
presence has remained undetected in most previous analyses of the stability of the
Stuart solution.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
30 articles.
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