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Fountains impinging on a density interface

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2008

JOSEPH K. ANSONG
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2G1
PATRICK J. KYBA
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2G1
BRUCE R. SUTHERLAND
Affiliation:
Departments of Physics and of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2G7

Abstract

We present an experimental study of an axisymmetric turbulent fountain in a two-layer stratified environment. Interacting with the interface, the fountain is observed to exhibit three regimes of flow. It may penetrate the interface, but nonetheless return to the source where it spreads as a radially propagating gravity current; the return flow may be trapped at the interface where it spreads as a radially propagating intrusion or it may do both. These regimes have been classified using empirically determined regime parameters which govern the relative initial momentum of the fountain and the relative density difference of the fountain and the ambient fluid. The maximum vertical distance travelled by the fountain in a two-layer fluid has been theoretically determined by extending the theory developed for fountains in a homogeneous environment. The theory compares favourably with experimental measurements. We have also developed a theory to analyse the initial speeds of the resulting radial currents. The spreading currents exhibited two different flow regimes: a constant-velocity regime and an inertia-buoyancy regime in which the front position, R, scales with time, t, as Rt3/4. These regimes were classified using a critical Froude number which characterized the competing effects of momentum and buoyancy in the currents.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

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