Linear Stability of Steady MHD States to Large-Scale Perturbations

Author(s):  
Vladislav Zheligovsky
Keyword(s):  
1994 ◽  
Vol 04 (05) ◽  
pp. 1147-1154 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER NEPOMNYASHCHY

Stationary square patterns are typical in several instability problems. Near the instability threshold, the evolution of long-wave disturbances can be described by a system of amplitude equations resembling the Newell-Whitehead-Segel equations. These equations are used for the linear stability analysis and the investigation of the defects.


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaële Perret ◽  
Thomas Dubos ◽  
Alexandre Stegner

Abstract Large-scale vortices, that is, eddies whose characteristic length scale is larger than the local Rossby radius of deformation Rd, are ubiquitous in the oceans, with anticyclonic vortices more prevalent than cyclonic ones. Stability or robustness properties of already formed shallow-water vortices have been investigated to explain this cyclone–anticyclone asymmetry. Here the focus is on possible asymmetries during the generation of vortices through barotropic instability of a parallel flow. The initial stage and the nonlinear stage of the instability are studied by means of linear stability analysis and direct numerical simulations of the one-layer rotating shallow-water equations, respectively. A wide variety of parallel flows are studied: isolated shears, the Bickley jet, and a family of wakes obtained by combining two shears of opposite signs. The results show that, when the flow is characterized by finite relative isopycnal deviation, the barotropic instability favors the formation of large-scale anticyclonic eddies. The authors emphasize here that the cyclone–anticyclone asymmetry of parallel flows may appear at the linear stage of the instability. This asymmetry finds its origin in the linear stability property of localized shear flows. Indeed, for both the cyclogeostrophic regime (finite Rossby number) and the frontal geostrophic regime (small Burger number), an anticyclonic shear flow has higher linear growth rates than an equivalent cyclonic shear flow. The nonlinear saturation then leads to the formation of almost axisymmetric anticyclones, while the cyclones tend to be more elongated in the shear direction. However, although some unstable parallel flows exhibit the asymmetry at the linear stage, others exhibit such asymmetry at the nonlinear stage only. If the distance separating two shear regions is large enough, the barotropic instability develops independently in each shear, leading in the frontal and the cyclogeostrophic regime to a significant cyclone–anticyclone asymmetry at the linear stage. Conversely, if the two shear regions are close to each other, the shears tend to be coupled at the linear stage. The most unstable perturbation then resembles the sinuous mode of the Bickley jet, making no distinction between regions of cyclonic or anticyclonic vorticity. Nevertheless, when the nonlinear saturation occurs, large-scale anticyclones tend to be axisymmetric while the cyclonic structures are highly distorted and elongated along the jet meander.


Author(s):  
Anaïs Guaus ◽  
Alessandro Bottaro

The linear stability of flows in curved compliant channels is examined. The walls bounding the fluid are modelled as thin cylindrical shells supported by a rigid outer frame through arrays of springs and dampers; this is often referred to as Kramer-type coating. Sufficiently soft compliant walls have an influence on the large-scale streamwise vortices produced in the channel by the centrifugal force, although the effect is limited to modes of large enough spanwise wavelengths. For even longer wavelengths, a spanwise-periodic surface-based wave precedes the onset of the streamwise vortex instability. Longitudinal or oblique travelling-wave flutter modes may appear and dominate the transition scenario, for sufficiently compliant walls, depending on the receptivity conditions.


Author(s):  
Shun Tazoe ◽  
Ayako Kawanishi ◽  
Masaharu Matsubara

In a two-dimensional turbulent jet, there exists a lateral vibration of the high-speed jet core. In the present study, a periodic initial disturbance is introduced into fully developed turbulent jet from a slot mounted at a duct exit in order to control this vibration. The streamwise and lateral velocity fluctuations are measured with an anemometer with an X-type probe, and are filtered using a phase ensemble average technique based on the periodic initial disturbance. This vibration enables extraction of the fluctuation of the synchronized disturbance and restruction of its velocity field. The experimental result shows that the streamwise variation of the extracted amplitude draws a characteristic growth curve that has the exponential growth at the upstream and slow decay parts at the downstream. It is worth noticing that within a certain amplitude of the initial disturbance the growth curves are identical as well as the spatial distribution of the extracted fluctuations. Furthermore the disturbance amplitude is directly proportional to the intensity of the initial disturbance. A linear stability theory with parallel flow assumption well captures futures of the lateral disturbance. This apparent linearity of the disturbance keeps until the average velocity and the total velocity fluctuation starts to vary with sufficient amplitude of the disturbance. The existence of the linear mode in the turbulent jet implies that the large-scale disturbance can be regarded as an incoherent set of the linear modes.


Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Burroughs ◽  
Louis A. Romero ◽  
Richard B. Lehoucq ◽  
Andrew G. Salinger
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Vol 40 (17-18) ◽  
pp. 7977-7987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Humberto Verdejo ◽  
William Escudero ◽  
Wolfgang Kliemann ◽  
Almendra Awerkin ◽  
Cristhian Becker ◽  
...  

1975 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Engelund

This paper deals with two main problems concerning flow in curved alluvial channels. First, the large-scale bottom geometry that develops through the interaction of flow and sediment motion is determined. Second, experiments in an annular flume indicate that the bed is unstable and that this particular instability leads to the formation of a certain number of scour holes. This is explained by a linear stability analysis.


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