Thermal stability of a fluid layer under variable body forces (Q1087413)

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Thermal stability of a fluid layer under variable body forces
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    Thermal stability of a fluid layer under variable body forces (English)
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    1987
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    The instability of a layer of fluid confined between two horizontal parallel planes and heated from above or below under the action of a gravitational field varying with height is investigated analytically. It is found that if gravity remains downward (upward) throughout the flow domain, neutral modes do not exist. A sufficient condition for stability of a layer heated from above is that gravity remains directed downward over a sufficiently large part of the flow domain. A circle theorem limiting the growth rate of an arbitrary oscillatory mode (whether stable, neutral or unstable) is established. A sufficient condition for instability of a layer heated from below is found to be that gravity remains directed downward and the gravity profile have concave curvature throughout most of the flow domain. For a linear varying gravity field with the downward gravitational acceleration increasing with height or decreasing with height slowly, (i) a layer heated from above is stable, (ii) a layer heated from below is unstable, and (iii) the circle theorem is modified depending on whether the gravitational acceleration is increasing or decreasing with height.
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    instability of a layer
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    horizontal parallel planes
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    gravitational field
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    neutral modes
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    sufficient condition for stability
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    circle theorem
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    growth rate of an arbitrary oscillatory mode
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    sufficient condition for instability
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    linear varying gravity field
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