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On a class of unsteady three-dimensional Navier—Stokes solutions relevant to rotating disc flows: threshold amplitudes and finite-time singularities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2006

Philip Hall
Affiliation:
Mathematics Department, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, M139TL, UK
P. Balakumar
Affiliation:
High Technology Corporation, Hampton, VA, USA
D. Papageorgiu
Affiliation:
New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark. NJ. USA

Abstract

A class of ‘exact’ steady and unsteady solutions of the Navier—Stokes equations in cylindrical polar coordinates is given. The flows correspond to the motion induced by an infinite disc rotating in the (x, y)-plane with constant angular velocity about the z-axis in a fluid occupying a semi-infinite region which, at large distances from the disc, has velocity field proportional to (x, — y,O) with respect to a Cartesian coordinate system. It is shown that when the rate of rotation is large Kármán's exact solution for a disc rotating in an otherwise motionless fluid is recovered. In the limit of zero rotation rate a particular form of Howarth's exact solution for three-dimensional stagnation-point flow is obtained. The unsteady form of the partial differential system describing this class of flow may be generalized to time-periodic flows. In addition the unsteady equations are shown to describe a strongly nonlinear instability of Kármán's rotating disc flow. It is shown that sufficiently large perturbations lead to a finite-time breakdown of that flow whilst smaller disturbances decay to zero. If the stagnation point flow at infinity is sufficiently strong the steady basic states become linearly unstable. In fact there is then a continuous spectrum of unstable eigenvalues of the stability equations but, if the initial-value problem is considered, it is found that, at large values of time, the continuous spectrum leads to a velocity field growing exponentially in time with an amplitude decaying algebraically in time.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1992 Cambridge University Press

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