On the development of plane waves generated by a periodic pressure applied to the flow of a continuously stratified fluid

1981 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 554-558
Author(s):  
S. F. Dotsenko
2008 ◽  
Vol 597 ◽  
pp. 283-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
STÉPHANE LE DIZÈS

The inviscid waves propagating on a Lamb–Oseen vortex in a rotating medium for an unstratified fluid and for a strongly stratified fluid are analysed using numerical and asymptotic approaches. By a local Lagrangian description, we first provide the characteristics of the local plane waves (inertia–gravity waves) as well as the local growth rate associated with the centrifugal instability when the vortex is unstable. A global WKBJ approach is then used to determine the frequencies of neutral core modes and neutral ring modes. We show that these global Kelvin modes only exist in restricted domains of the parameters. The consequences of these domain limitations for the occurrence of the elliptic instability are discussed. We argue that in an unstratified fluid the elliptic instability should be active in a small range of the Coriolis parameter which could not have been predicted from a local approach. The wavenumbers of the sinuous modes of the elliptic instability are provided as a function of the Coriolis parameter for both an unstratified fluid and a strongly stratified fluid.


2021 ◽  
Vol 927 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curtis Hooper ◽  
Karima Khusnutdinova ◽  
Roger Grimshaw

We study long surface and internal ring waves propagating in a stratified fluid over a parallel shear current. The far-field modal and amplitude equations for the ring waves are presented in dimensional form. We re-derive the modal equations from the formulation for plane waves tangent to the ring wave, which opens a way to obtaining important characteristics of the ring waves (group speed, wave action conservation law) and to constructing more general ‘hybrid solutions’ consisting of a part of a ring wave and two tangent plane waves. The modal equations constitute a new spectral problem, and are analysed for a number of examples of surface ring waves in a homogeneous fluid and internal ring waves in a stratified fluid. Detailed analysis is developed for the case of a two-layered fluid with a linear shear current where we study their wavefronts and two-dimensional modal structure. Comparisons are made between the modal functions (i.e. eigenfunctions of the relevant spectral problems) for the surface waves in homogeneous and two-layered fluids, as well as the interfacial waves described exactly and in the rigid-lid approximation. We also analyse the wavefronts of surface and interfacial waves for a large family of power-law upper-layer currents, which can be used to model wind generated currents, river inflows and exchange flows in straits. Global and local measures of the deformation of wavefronts are introduced and evaluated.


Author(s):  
Xudong Weng ◽  
O.F. Sankey ◽  
Peter Rez

Single electron band structure techniques have been applied successfully to the interpretation of the near edge structures of metals and other materials. Among various band theories, the linear combination of atomic orbital (LCAO) method is especially simple and interpretable. The commonly used empirical LCAO method is mainly an interpolation method, where the energies and wave functions of atomic orbitals are adjusted in order to fit experimental or more accurately determined electron states. To achieve better accuracy, the size of calculation has to be expanded, for example, to include excited states and more-distant-neighboring atoms. This tends to sacrifice the simplicity and interpretability of the method.In this paper. we adopt an ab initio scheme which incorporates the conceptual advantage of the LCAO method with the accuracy of ab initio pseudopotential calculations. The so called pscudo-atomic-orbitals (PAO's), computed from a free atom within the local-density approximation and the pseudopotential approximation, are used as the basis of expansion, replacing the usually very large set of plane waves in the conventional pseudopotential method. These PAO's however, do not consist of a rigorously complete set of orthonormal states.


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