Abstract

Data assimilation is used to couple numerical simulations and laboratory experiments of unsteady fluid flows in a stratified, rotating fluid. The experiments are performed on the large Coriolis turntable (Grenoble) and the simulations are performed with a multi-layer shallow water model. Sequential assimilation of high-resolution CIV (Correlation Image Velocimetry) measurements drives the numerical model close to the experimental flow and provides an estimation of all the flow variables at each time and each point. It is then possible (i) to analyse the flow dynamics in details, (ii) to determine the model errors starting from a realistic initial condition and (iii) to test the assimilation scheme when a reduced set of data is assimilated. To illustrate this, some results on the baroclinic instability of a two-layer vortex are presented. To cite this article: M. Galmiche et al., C. R. Mecanique 331 (2003).

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