Author:
FRÜH WOLF-GERRIT,READ PETER L.
Abstract
The barotropic shear layer in a rotating fluid is studied in a
laboratory experiment.
Through the rotation of circular sections in the base and lid of a circular
tank relative
to a background rotation of the entire system, a vertical layer of strong
horizontal
shear develops, the Stewartson layer. Above a critical shear, the shear
layer breaks up
through barotropic instability, which is an inertial instability. The flow
then develops
a string of vortices along the shear zone. It will be shown that the transition
from an
axisymmetric flow to regular vortices occurs through a Hopf bifurcation.
Subsequent
transitions to more complex flows, such as modulated vortices, chaos and
highly
irregular flow, will be presented briefly, while the main points of this
paper are the
primary instability, steady vortices and their nonlinear dynamics. Among
the issues
discussed is the sensitivity of the flow to the direction of the differential
shear. The
experimental data will be used to test the ability of boundary layer theory
and
quasi-geostrophic theory to predict the onset of instability and the range
of unstable
wavenumbers.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
51 articles.
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