Structure and stability of the compressible Stuart vortex
- Creators
- O'Reilly, G.
-
Pullin, D. I.
Abstract
The structure and two- and three-dimensional stability properties of a linear array of compressible Stuart vortices (CSV; Stuart 1967; Meiron et al. 2000) are investigated both analytically and numerically. The CSV is a family of steady, homentropic, two-dimensional solutions to the compressible Euler equations, parameterized by the free-stream Mach number M_∞, and the mass flux _ inside a single vortex core. Known solutions have 0 < M_∞ < 1. To investigate the normal-mode stability of the generally spatially non-uniform CSV solutions, the linear partial-differential equations describing the time evolution of small perturbations to the CSV base state are solved numerically using a normal-mode analysis in conjunction with a spectral method. The effect of increasing M_∞ on the two main classes of instabilities found by Pierrehumbert & Widnall (1982) for the incompressible limit M_∞ → 0 is studied. It is found that both two- and three-dimensional subharmonic instabilities cease to promote pairing events even at moderate M_∞. The fundamental mode becomes dominant at higher Mach numbers, although it ceases to peak strongly at a single spanwise wavenumber. We also find, over the range of ε investigated, a new instability corresponding to an instability on a parallel shear layer. The significance of these instabilities to experimental observations of growth in the compressible mixing layer is discussed. In an Appendix, we study the CSV equations when ε is small and M_∞ is finite using a perturbation expansion in powers of ε. An eigenvalue determining the structure of the perturbed vorticity and density fields is obtained from a singular Sturm–Liouville problem for the stream-function perturbation at O(ε). The resulting small-amplitude steady CSV solutions are shown to represent a bifurcation from the neutral point in the stability of a parallel shear layer with a tanh-velocity profile in a compressible inviscid perfect gas at uniform temperature.
Additional Information
© 2003 Cambridge University Press. Received 30 December 2002 and in revised form 20 May 2003. This work was supported by the Academic Strategic Alliances Program of the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI/ASAP) under subcontract no. B341492 of DOE contract W-7405-ENG-48.Attached Files
Published - OREjfm03.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 27406
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20111025-105659702
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- B341492
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- W-7405-ENG-48
- Created
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2011-10-26Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-02-11Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- GALCIT