Abstract

Theoretical analyses and laboratory experiments have been performed on the stability of a flow generated by the differential cyclonic corotation of a flat, rigid disk in a uniformly rotating, linearly stratified fluid contained within a cylindrical tank. The undisturbed fluid is stably stratified with salt (Schmidt number σ≈670) and the (vertical) axes of rotation of the disk and the fluid container are coincident. The theoretical analysis shows that when the interior flow satisfies gradient wind balance (or, alternatively, thermal wind balance), it is destabilized by the action of viscosity. In the experiments, the manifestation of the viscous overturning instability is seen to be the formation of steplike internal microstructures in the density field, observed as regularly spaced, curved ring-shaped sheets with associated localized sharp, vertical density gradients. A stability analysis of the flow shows that the instability criterion is dependent on local values of the vertical and radial gradients of zonal velocity and the background density field. These quantities are measured in the experiments using a combination of horizontal-plane particle image velocimetry and an array of traversing microconductivity probes. The stability criterion based on this linear analysis predicts that the interior of the fluid is unstable. Using the σ⪢1 condition, simple asymptotic expressions for the maximum growth rate and associated wave number have been derived from the cubic dispersion relation. The theoretically predicted length scales and e-folding times associated with the fastest growing modes are found to give excellent agreement with the corresponding values obtained from the laboratory experimental data.

Highlights

  • The term spin-up is commonly used to describe the process by which a bounded fluid in a state of solid-body rotation responds to a change in external forcing induced by an increase in rotation rate of the flow boundariesor, in some cases, a specific region of the flow boundary

  • In anticipation of the cylindrical geometry used in our experiments, letr, ␪, zdenote the cylindrical coordinate system which rotates with constant angular velocity ⍀zabout the vertical z-axis aligned antiparallel to the gravitational acceleration vector −gz

  • A cylindrical acrylic tankdiameter 36 cm; height 30 cmwas fitted centrally inside an outer rectangular containerthereby eliminating optical distortion caused by the curved sidewallsand mounted on a rotating turntable with the axis of the cylinder aligned through the vertical rotation axis of the tableas shown

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The term spin-up is commonly used to describe the process by which a bounded fluid in a state of solid-body rotation responds to a change in external forcing induced by an increase in rotation rate of the flow boundariesor, in some cases, a specific region of the flow boundary. At about the same time, and using an experiment setup similar to one the described here, Baker provided experimental evidence of McIntyre’s instability for a salt-stratified fluid. That of a salt-stratified water solution with Schmidt number ␴ Ϸ 670, the destabilizimproved spatial and temporal resolution in comparison with the relatively primitive measurements obtained by Baker and Calman.. That of a salt-stratified water solution with Schmidt number ␴ Ϸ 670, the destabilizimproved spatial and temporal resolution in comparison with the relatively primitive measurements obtained by Baker and Calman.14 This was achieved using an array of highing agent is viscosity. Adopting the approach taken by McIntyre, we treat the basic

LINEAR STABILITY THEORY
Experiment arrangement
Observations
Comparison with experiment

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