Abstract

The asymptotic analysis of steady azimuthally invariant electromagnetically driven flows occurring in a shallow annular layer of electrolyte undertaken in Part 1 of this study (McCloughan & Suslov, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 980, 2024, A59) predicted the existence of a two-tori flow state that has not been detected previously. In Part 2 of the study we confirm its existence by numerical time integration of the governing equations. We observe a hysteresis, where the type of solution obtained for the same set of governing parameters depends on the choice of the initial conditions and the way the governing parameters change, which is fully consistent with the analytic results of Part 1. Subsequently, we perform a linear stability analysis of the newly obtained steady state and deduce that the experimentally observed anti-cyclonic free-surface vortices appear on its background as a result of a centrifugal (Rayleigh-type) instability of the interface separating two counter-rotating toroidal structures that form the newly found flow solution. The quantitative characteristics of such instability structures are determined. It is shown that such structures can only exist in sufficiently thin layers with the depth not exceeding a certain critical value.

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