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Laboratory and numerical studies of baroclinic waves in an internally heated rotating fluid annulus: a case of wave/vortex duality?
The structure, transport properties and regimes of flow exhibited in a rotating fluid annulus, subject to internal heating and sidewall cooling, are studied both in the laboratory and in numerical simulations. The performance of the numerical model is verified quantitatively to within a few per cent...
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Published in: | Journal of fluid mechanics 1997-04, Vol.337, p.155-191 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The structure, transport properties and regimes of flow exhibited
in
a rotating fluid
annulus, subject to internal heating and sidewall cooling, are studied
both in the
laboratory and in numerical simulations. The performance of the numerical
model
is verified quantitatively to within a few per cent in several cases by
direct
comparison with measurements in the laboratory of temperature and horizontal
velocity
fields in the axisymmetric and regular wave regimes. The basic azimuthal
mean flow
produced by this distribution of heat sources and sinks leads to strips
of potential
vorticity in which the radial gradient of potential vorticity changes sign
in
both the
vertical and horizontal directions. From diagnosis of the energy budget
of numerical
simulations, the principal instability of the flow is shown to be predominantly
baroclinic in nature, though with a non-negligible contribution towards
the
maintenance
of the non-axisymmetric flow components from the barotropic wave–zonal
flow
interaction. The structure of the regime diagram for the internally heated
baroclinic
waves is shown to have some aspects in common with conventional wall-heated
annulus waves, but the former shows no evidence for time-dependence in
the form
of ‘amplitude vacillation’. Internally heated flows instead
evidently prefer to make
transitions between wavenumbers in the regular regime via a form of vortex
merging
and/or splitting, indicating a mixed vortex/wave character to the
non-axisymmetric
flows in this system. The transition towards irregular flow occurs via
a form of
wavenumber vacillation, also involving vortex splitting and merging events.
Baroclinic eddies are shown to develop from an initial axisymmetric flow
via a mixed
sinuous/varicose instability, leading to the formation of detached
vortices
of the same
sign as the ambient axisymmetric potential vorticity at that level, in
a
manner which
resembles recent simulations of atmospheric baroclinic frontal instability
and varicose
barotropic instabilities. Dye tracer experiments confirm the mixed wave/vortex
character of the equilibrated instabilities, and exhibit chaotic advection
in
time-dependent flows. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1120 1469-7645 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022112097004837 |