Rayleigh-Taylor instability of an inclined buoyant viscous cylinder

John R. Lister, Ross C. Kerr, Nick J. Russell, Andrew Crosby

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    15 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The Rayleigh-Taylor instability of an inclined buoyant cylinder of one very viscous fluid rising through another is examined through linear stability analysis, numerical simulation and experiment. The stability analysis represents linear eigenmodes of a given axial wavenumber as a Fourier series in the azimuthal direction, allowing the use of separable solutions to the Stokes equations in cylindrical polar coordinates. The most unstable wavenumber k is long-wave if both the inclination angle and the viscosity ratio (internal/external) are small; for this case, k max{, ( ln 1) 1/2} and thus a small angle in experiments can have a significant effect for 1. As increases, the maximum growth rate decreases and the upward propagation rate of disturbances increases; all disturbances propagate without growth if the cylinder is sufficiently close to vertical, estimated as 70. Results from the linear stability analysis agree with numerical calculations for = 1 and experimental observations. A point-force numerical method is used to calculate the development of instability into a chain of individual plumes via a complex three-dimensional flow. Towed-source experiments show that nonlinear interactions between neighbouring plumes are important for 20 and that disturbances can propagate out of the system without significant growth forα≳ 40.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)313-338
    Number of pages26
    JournalJournal of Fluid Mechanics
    Volume671
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 25 Mar 2011

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