Vortex Flows and Related Numerical Methods II
ESAIM: Proceedings,
Vol. 1, 1996, pp. 447-462
The Robustness of Self-Organized Zonal Jets in
Unforced, Turbulent Vorticity Fields
James Y.-K. Cho and Lorenzo M. Polvani
Program in Applied Mathematics and Department of Applied Physics
Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA
Abstract
A wide parameter space is spanned to check the influence of
numerical parameters on self-organized jets in rotating, turbulent
shallow-water flows. It is found that, even in harsh physical
(strongly ageostrophic) and numerical (filtered, hyperviscous,
high-resolution) environments, the basic morphogenesis of steady
jets, qualitatively reflecting the Rhines scale, is robust.
However, detailed features of the jet pattern, such as the
amplitude, the width, and the location can be substantially affected
by numerical parameters for a fixed set of physical parameters. In
general, while the amount of energy lost seems to be a good
predictor of maximum jet amplitude and width, a nonmonotonic
dependence of these features on the numerical parameters is
observed. The most acute sensitivity is associated with the use of
a
hyperdissipation operator in conjunction with a
Robert-Asselin filter, which leads to substantial meridional shifts
of the entire jet pattern as the viscosity coefficient is varied.
Vortex Flows and Related
Numerical Methods II
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