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Simply-connected vortex-patch shallow-water quasi-equilibria

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Dritschel_2014_JFD_Simply.pdf (1.101Mb)
Date
05/03/2014
Author
Plotka, Hanna
Dritschel, David Gerard
Keywords
Rotating flows
Shallow water flows
Vortex dynamics
QC Physics
QA Mathematics
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Abstract
We examine the form, properties, stability and evolution of simply-connected vortex-patch relative quasi-equilibria in the single-layer ƒ-plane shallow-water model of geophysical fluid dynamics. We examine the effects of the size, shape and strength of vortices in this system, represented by three distinct parameters completely describing the families of the quasi-equilibria. Namely, these are the ratio γ=L/LD between the horizontal size of the vortices and the Rossby deformation length; the aspect ratio λ between the minor to major axes of the vortex; and a potential vorticity (PV)-based Rossby number Ro=q′/ƒ, the ratio of the PV anomaly q′ within the vortex to the Coriolis frequency ƒ. By defining an appropriate steadiness parameter, we find that the quasi-equilibria remain steady for long times, enabling us to determine the boundary of stability λc=λc(γ, Ro), for 0.25≤γ≤6 and |Ro|≤1. By calling two states which share γ,|Ro| and λ ‘equivalent’, we find a clear asymmetry in the stability of cyclonic (Ro>0) and anticyclonic (Ro<0) equilibria, with cyclones being able to sustain greater deformations than anticyclones before experiencing an instability. We find that ageostrophic motions stabilise cyclones and destabilise anticyclones. Both types of vortices undergo the same main types of unstable evolution, albeit in different ranges of the parameter space, (a) vacillations for large-γ, large-Ro states, (b) filamentation for small-γ states and (c) vortex splitting, asymmetric for intermediate-γ and symmetric for large-γ states.
Citation
Plotka , H & Dritschel , D G 2014 , ' Simply-connected vortex-patch shallow-water quasi-equilibria ' , Journal of Fluid Mechanics , vol. 743 , pp. 481-502 . https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2014.48
Publication
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2014.48
ISSN
0022-1120
Type
Journal article
Rights
© 2014 Cambridge University Press
Description
This work is supported by a UK Natural Environment Research Council studentship
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  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/6179

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