Finite amplitude Kelvin-Helmholtz billows at high Richardson number

ORAL

Abstract

We study the dynamical system of a stratified mixing layer at finite Reynolds number and unity Prandtl number with hyperbolic tangent profiles in streamwise background velocity and density, forced in such a way that these background profiles are a steady solution of the governing equations.
As is well-known, if the minimum Richardson number $Ri_m$ is less than a certain critical value $Ri_c$, the flow is linearly unstable to Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. We show that unstable, steady, two-dimensional, finite amplitude elliptical vortex structures , i.e. `Kelvin-Helmholtz billows', exist above $Ri_c$. Bifurcation diagrams are produced using branch continuation, and we explore how these diagrams change with varying Reynolds number. In particular, we examine whether such finite amplitude Kelvin-Helmholtz billows can exist at $Ri_m>1/4$, where the flow is linearly stable by the Miles-Howard theorem.

*This work is supported by EPSRC

Presenters

  • Jeremy Parker

    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge

Authors

  • Jeremy Parker

    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge
  • C. P. P. Caulfield

    • BP Institute/DAMTP Univ of Cambridge
    • Cambridge University, DAMTP
    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge
    • BPI/DAMTP, University of Cambridge
    • BP Institute, DAMTP, University of Cambridge
    • BP Institute & DAMTP, U. of Cambridge
  • Rich Kerswell

    • DAMTP Univ of Cambridge
    • DAMTP, University of Cambridge