Travelling vortices over mountains and the long-term structure of the residual flow
DOI10.1017/jfm.2021.567zbMath1493.76118OpenAlexW3185185217MaRDI QIDQ4957368
Jeasson F. Gonzalez, Luis Zavala Sansón
Publication date: 8 September 2021
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2021.567
finite difference methodrotating flowtopographic effecttopographic Rossby wavevortex pathbarotropic dipolar vortexquasi-two-dimensional vortex dynamics
Hydrology, hydrography, oceanography (86A05) Finite difference methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M20) General theory of rotating fluids (76U05) Geophysical flows (76U60) Rossby waves (76U65)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Topography effects on vortices in a rotating fluid
- Solutions of barotropic trapped waves around seamounts
- Horizontal and vertical motions of barotropic vortices over a submarine mountain
- Ekman decay of a dipolar vortex in a rotating fluid
- Laboratory Modeling of Geophysical Vortices
- A modulated point-vortex model for geostrophic, β-plane dynamics
- Motion of three vortices
- On Chaplygin's investigations of two-dimensional vortex structures in an inviscid fluid
- Long-time shallow-water equations with a varying bottom
- Ekman effects in a rotating flow over bottom topography
- Dynamics of monopolar vortices on a topographic beta-plane
- Atmospheric and Oceanic Fluid Dynamics
- Azimuthal-mode solutions of two-dimensional Euler flows and the Chaplygin–Lamb dipole
- Stable and unstable vortices attached to seamounts
- Barotropic quasi-geostrophic f-plane flow over anisotropic topography
- Stability of relative equilibria of three vortices
- Nonlinear and time-dependent equivalent-barotropic flows
- Slow oscillations in an ocean of varying depth Part 1. Abrupt topography
- Quasi-geostrophic vortex solutions over isolated topography
- Unnamed Item
This page was built for publication: Travelling vortices over mountains and the long-term structure of the residual flow