Author:
BILLANT PAUL,CHOMAZ JEAN-MARC
Abstract
This paper shows that a long vertical columnar vortex pair created by a double flap
apparatus in a strongly stratified fluid is subjected to an instability distinct from the
Crow and short-wavelength instabilities known to occur in homogeneous fluid. This
new instability, which we name zigzag instability, is antisymmetric with respect to the
plane separating the vortices. It is characterized by a vertically modulated twisting
and bending of the whole vortex pair with almost no change of the dipole's cross-
sectional structure. No saturation is observed and, ultimately, the vortex pair is sliced
into thin horizontal layers of independent pancake dipoles. For the largest Brunt–Väisälä
frequency N = 1.75 rad s−1 that may be achieved in the experiments, the zigzag
instability is observed only in the range of Froude numbers:
0.13 < Fh0 < 0.21 (Fh0
= U0/NR, where U0 and R
are the initial dipole travelling velocity and radius). When
Fh0 > 0.21, the elliptic instability develops resulting in three-dimensional motions
which eventually collapse into a relaminarized vortex pair. Irregular zigzags are then
also observed to grow. The threshold for the inhibition of the elliptic instability
Fh0 = 0.2±0.01 is independent of N and in good agreement with the theoretical study
of Miyazaki & Fukumoto (1992). Complete stabilization for Fh0 < 0.13 is probably
due to viscous effects since the associated Reynolds number is low, Re0 < 260. In
geophysical flows characterized by low Froude numbers and large Reynolds numbers,
we conjecture that this viscous stabilization will occur at much lower Froude number.It is tentatively argued that this new type of instability may explain the layering
widely observed in stratified turbulent flows.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
141 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献