- Series
- Other Talks
- Time
- Wednesday, February 9, 2011 - 4:15pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Howey W505
- Speaker
- Paolo Luzzatto-Fegiz – Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, Cornell University
- Organizer
Steady fluid solutions can play a special role in characterizing the dynamics of
a flow: stable states might be realized in practice, while unstable ones may act
as attractors in the unsteady evolution. Unfortunately, determining stability is
often a process substantially more laborious than computing steady flows; this is
highlighted by the fact that, for several comparatively simple flows, stability
properties have been the subject of protracted disagreement (see e.g.
Dritschel et al. 2005, and references therein).
In this talk, we build on some ideas of Lord Kelvin, who, over a century ago,
proposed an energy-based stability argument for steady flows. In essence,
Kelvin’s approach involves using the second variation of the energy to establish
bounds on the growth of a perturbation. However, for numerically obtained fluid
equilibria, computing the second variation of the energy explicitly is often not
feasible. Whether Kelvin’s ideas could be implemented for general flows has been
debated extensively (Saffman & Szeto, 1980; Dritschel, 1985; Saffman, 1992;
Dritschel, 1995).
We recently developed a stability approach, for families of steady flows, which
constitutes a rigorous implementation of Kelvin’s argument. We build on ideas
from bifurcation theory, and link turning points in a velocity-impulse diagram to
exchanges of stability. We further introduce concepts from imperfection theory
into these problems, enabling us to reveal hidden solution branches. Our approach
detects exchanges of stability directly from families of steady flows, without
resorting to more involved stability calculations. We consider several examples
involving fundamental vortex and wave flows. For all flows studied, we obtain
stability results in agreement with linear analysis, while additionally
discovering new steady solutions, which exhibit lower symmetry.
Paolo is a candidate for J Ford Fellowship at CNS.
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