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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulence and waves in a rotating tank

Emil J. Hopfinger, +2 more
- 01 Dec 1982 - 
- Vol. 125, Iss: -1, pp 505-534
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TLDR
A turbulent field is produced with an oscillating grid in a deep, rotating tank as discussed by the authors, which consists of concentrated vortices having axes approximately parallel to the rotation axis, and extending throughout the depth of the fluid above the turbulent Ekman layer.
Abstract
A turbulent field is produced with an oscillating grid in a deep, rotating tank. Near the grid, the Rossby number is kept large, 0(3-33), and the turbulence is locally unaffected by rotation. Away from the grid, the scale of the turbulence increases, the r.m.s. turbulent velocity decreases, and rotation becomes increasingly important. The flow field changes dramatically at a local Rossby number of about 0.20, and thereafter remains independent of depth. The flow consists of concentrated vortices having axes approximately parallel to the rotation axis, and extending throughout the depth of the fluid above the turbulent Ekman layer. The number of vortices per unit area is a function of the grid Rossby number. The local vorticity within cores can be a factor of 50 larger than the tank vorticity 2Ω. The total relative circulation contained in the vortices remains, however, a small fraction of the tank circulation.The concentrated vortex cores support waves consisting of helical distortions, which travel along the axes of individual vortices. Isolated, travelling waves seem well-described by the vortex-soliton theory of Hasimoto (1972). The nonlinear waves transport mass, momentum and energy from the vigorously turbulent region near the grid to the rotation-dominated flow above. Interactions between waves, which are frequent occurrences, almost always result in a local breakdown of the vortex core, and small-scale turbulence production. Usually the portions of broken core reform within ½−1 rotation periods, but occasionally cores are destroyed and reformed on a much longer timescale.

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Citations
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Evolution of a stratified turbulent cloud under rotation

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate the evolution of a stratified turbulent cloud under rotation and stratification, where the columnar structures are composed of inertial-gravity waves, as both the tilting angles of the flow structures and vertical growth rates of the turbulent cloud can be predicted by the linear theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rossby Number Effects on Columnar Eddy Formation and the Energy Dissipation Law in Homogeneous Rotating Turbulence

TL;DR: In this article, a scaling law for the energy dissipation rate of columnar eddies was proposed, which is based on the concept of a spectral transfer time introduced by Kraichnan (1965).
Journal Article

Vortex Generation by Multiple Source-Sink Forcing in a Rotating Tank

TL;DR: In this paper, the fundamental features of a vortex field generated by multiple source-sink forcing in a rotating system were investigated using a cylindrical tank (38 cm in diameter, 52 cm in depth) containing homogeneous fluid and covered with a transparent horizontal plate to eliminate the B~effect.
Book ChapterDOI

On Turbulization of the Tornado-Like Vortices and Transition to a System of Vortices

B. M. Boubnov
TL;DR: The role of rotation is usually determined by the Rossby number Ro=U/LΩ as mentioned in this paper, where U is the characteristic velocity of motions and could be determined by other parameters of the problems, Ω is the angular rate of rotation and L is a characteristic size of the system.

Multiparticle Lagrangian statistics in homogeneous rotating turbulence

TL;DR: In this paper , the relative dispersion and geometry of pairs, triads and tetrads in homogeneous rotating turbulence are investigated by using direct numerical simulations at different rotation rates, and it is shown that pair dispersion is faster in the vertical direction (along the rotation axis) than in the horizontal one.
References
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Book

An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics

TL;DR: The dynamique des : fluides Reference Record created on 2005-11-18 is updated on 2016-08-08 and shows improvements in the quality of the data over the past decade.
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A mathematical model illustrating the theory of turbulence

TL;DR: In this article, the application of statistical analysis and statistical mechanics to the problem of turbulent fluid motion has attracted much attention in recent years, and the authors investigated a complicated system of nonlinear equations, in order to find out enough about the properties of the solutions of these equations that insight can be obtained into the various patterns exhibited by the field and that data can be derived concerning the relative frequencies of these patterns in the hope that in this way a basis may be found for the calculation of important values.
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A soliton on a vortex filament

TL;DR: In this article, the intrinsic equation governing the curvature K and the torsion τ of an isolated very thin vortex filament without stretching in an incompressible inviscid fluid is reduced to a non-linear Schrodinger equation.
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On stationary and travelling vortex breakdowns

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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatially decaying turbulence and its relation to mixing across density interfaces

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