Horizontal shear instabilities in low-Froude high-Re stratified flows produce vertical shear through two distinct pathways, each leading to small-scale KH instabilities at large buoyancy Reynolds number but with different peak mixing efficiencies.
The linear instability of the stratified plane Couette flow
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abstract
We present the stability analysis of a plane Couette flow which is stably stratified in the vertical direction orthogonally to the horizontal shear. Interest in such a flow comes from geophysical and astrophysical applications where background shear and vertical stable stratification commonly coexist. We perform the linear stability analysis of the flow in a domain which is periodic in the stream-wise and vertical directions and confined in the cross-stream direction. The stability diagram is constructed as a function of the Reynolds number Re and the Froude number Fr, which compares the importance of shear and stratification. We find that the flow becomes unstable when shear and stratification are of the same order (i.e. Fr $\sim$ 1) and above a moderate value of the Reynolds number Re$\gtrsim$700. The instability results from a resonance mechanism already known in the context of channel flows, for instance the unstratified plane Couette flow in the shallow water approximation. The result is confirmed by fully non linear direct numerical simulations and to the best of our knowledge, constitutes the first evidence of linear instability in a vertically stratified plane Couette flow. We also report the study of a laboratory flow generated by a transparent belt entrained by two vertical cylinders and immersed in a tank filled with salty water linearly stratified in density. We observe the emergence of a robust spatio-temporal pattern close to the threshold values of F r and Re indicated by linear analysis, and explore the accessible part of the stability diagram. With the support of numerical simulations we conclude that the observed pattern is a signature of the same instability predicted by the linear theory, although slightly modified due to streamwise confinement.
fields
physics.flu-dyn 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Two pathways to diapycnal mixing in strongly stratified flows with no initial vertical shear
Horizontal shear instabilities in low-Froude high-Re stratified flows produce vertical shear through two distinct pathways, each leading to small-scale KH instabilities at large buoyancy Reynolds number but with different peak mixing efficiencies.