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Effects of the Coriolis force on the stability of Stuart vortices

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 1998

STÉPHANE LEBLANC
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Mécanique des Fluides et d'Acoustique, UMR 5509 CNRS Ecole Centrale de Lyon, BP 163, 69131 Ecully Cedex, France
CLAUDE CAMBON
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Mécanique des Fluides et d'Acoustique, UMR 5509 CNRS Ecole Centrale de Lyon, BP 163, 69131 Ecully Cedex, France

Abstract

A detailed investigation of the effects of the Coriolis force on the three-dimensional linear instabilities of Stuart vortices is proposed. This exact inviscid solution describes an array of co-rotating vortices embedded in a shear flow. When the axis of rotation is perpendicular to the plane of the basic flow, the stability analysis consists of an eigenvalue problem for non-parallel versions of the coupled Orr–Sommerfeld and Squire equations, which is solved numerically by a spectral method. The Coriolis force acts on instabilities as a ‘tuner’, when compared to the non-rotating case. A weak anticyclonic rotation is destabilizing: three-dimensional Floquet modes are promoted, and at large spanwise wavenumber their behaviour is predicted by a ‘pressureless’ analysis. This latter analysis, which has been extensively discussed for simple flows in a recent paper (Leblanc & Cambon 1997) is shown to be relevant to the present study. The basic mechanism of short-wave breakdown is a competition between instabilities generated by the elliptical cores of the vortices and by the hyperbolic stagnation points in the braids, in accordance with predictions from the ‘geometrical optics’ stability theory. On the other hand, cyclonic or stronger anticyclonic rotation kills three-dimensional instabilities by a cut-off in the spanwise wavenumber. Under rapid rotation, the Stuart vortices are stabilized, whereas inertial waves propagate.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

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