Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10119613 Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans 2005 19 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper addresses the role of no-slip boundaries as vorticity sources in two-dimensional turbulence on bounded domains. In recent years, numerical evidence from decaying two-dimensional turbulence simulations in circular and square domains has been provided showing that vorticity produced at solid boundaries enters the flow at scales comparable with the average boundary-layer thickness. The thin detached boundary layers contain high-amplitude vorticity, and these boundary layers roll up to form small strong vortices which are advected by the background flow into the interior of the flow domain. As a result, the vortex statistics of the flow are modified: while the merging process active in the interior leads to a decrease of the number of vortices, the solid walls act as sources of vortices. We will briefly review numerically obtained results for decaying two-dimensional turbulence, and provide supporting experimental evidence from forced quasi-two-dimensional turbulence in rotating containers. Additionally, numerical simulations of forced two-dimensional turbulence are reported illustrating the dynamical impact of the presence of solid boundaries: a large-scale vortex is gradually built up and later on suddenly destroyed by the destabilizing effect of strong small-scale vortices produced near the solid walls. After the collapse, the self-organization process may start anew, and most strikingly, the circulation of the central vortex may even show sign reversal.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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