Author:
DAUXOIS THIERRY,YOUNG W. R.
Abstract
Using a matched asymptotic expansion we analyse the two-dimensional, near-critical
reflection of a weakly nonlinear internal gravity wave from a sloping boundary in
a uniformly stratified fluid. Taking a distinguished limit in which the amplitude
of the incident wave, the dissipation, and the departure from criticality are all
small, we obtain a reduced description of the dynamics. This simplification shows
how either dissipation or transience heals the singularity which is presented by the
solution of Phillips (1966) in the precisely critical case. In the inviscid critical case, an
explicit solution of the initial value problem shows that the buoyancy perturbation
and the alongslope velocity both grow linearly with time, while the scale of the
reflected disturbance is reduced as 1/t. During the course of this scale reduction, the
stratification is ‘overturned’ and the Miles–Howard condition for stratified shear flow
stability is violated. However, for all slope angles, the ‘overturning’ occurs before the
Miles–Howard stability condition is violated and so we argue that the first instability
is convective.Solutions of the simplified dynamics resemble certain experimental visualizations
of the reflection process. In particular, the buoyancy field computed from the analytic
solution is in good agreement with visualizations reported by Thorpe & Haines
(1987).One curious aspect of the weakly nonlinear theory is that the final reduced description
is a linear equation (at the solvability order in the expansion all of the
apparently resonant nonlinear contributions cancel amongst themselves). However,
the reconstructed fields do contain nonlinearly driven second harmonics which are
responsible for an important symmetry breaking in which alternate vortices differ in
strength and size from their immediate neighbours.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
83 articles.
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