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Faraday's instability in viscous fluid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 1998

E. A. CERDA
Affiliation:
Dept. de Física de la Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Av. Ecuador 3493, Casilla 307-2, Santiago, Chile Centro de Física No Lineal y Sistemas Complejos de Santiago, Casilla 27122, Santiago, Chile Present address: MIT, 3-357, 77, Mass. Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139, USA, email: ecerda@mit.edu.
E. L. TIRAPEGUI
Affiliation:
Centro de Física No Lineal y Sistemas Complejos de Santiago, Casilla 27122, Santiago, Chile Dept. de Física de la Fac. de Ciencias Físicas y Matemáticas de la Universidad de Chile, Beaucheff 850, Casilla 487-3, Santiago, Chile

Abstract

We find a quantitative approximation which explains the appearance and amplification of surface waves in a highly viscous fluid when it is subjected to vertical accelerations (Faraday's instability). Although stationary surface waves with frequency equal to half of the frequency of the excitation are observed in fluids of different kinematical viscosities we show here that the mechanism which produces the instability is very different for a highly viscous fluid as compared with a weakly viscous fluid. This is achieved by deriving an exact equation for the linear evolution of the surface which is non-local in time. We show that for a highly viscous fluid this equation becomes local and of second order and is then a Mathieu equation which is different from the one found for weak viscosity. Analysing the new equation we find an intimate relation with the Rayleigh–Taylor instability.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 Cambridge University Press

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