A Novel Model of Quasi-Stationary Vortices in the Earth’s Atmosphere

In the great variety of vortex motions in the atmosphere, concentrated vortices, attracting increased interest from the point of view of both fundamental research and practice, clearly stick out. A sufficiently precise definition of the concentrated vortex can be given for the case of an ideal fluid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Izvestiya. Atmospheric and oceanic physics 2018-12, Vol.54 (8), p.906-910
Hauptverfasser: Onishchenko, O. G., Pokhotelov, O. A., Astafieva, N. M.
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Pokhotelov, O. A.
Astafieva, N. M.
description In the great variety of vortex motions in the atmosphere, concentrated vortices, attracting increased interest from the point of view of both fundamental research and practice, clearly stick out. A sufficiently precise definition of the concentrated vortex can be given for the case of an ideal fluid—it is an area localized in the space, surrounded by a potential flow and having a nonzero vorticity. Such vortices can be combined into a class of small-scale concentrated vortices including dust devils (DDs), waterspouts, fire vortices, and larger scale and more intense tornadoes. Unlike planetary-scale vortices (cyclones and anticyclones), DDs and tornadoes are small-scale vortices. DDs and tornadoes are generated in different environments (tornadoes occur in strong storm clouds), but they have much in common in regards to their structure. The speed of rotation in such vortices reaches the maximum value at a characteristic radius and tends to zero when approaching the center. The rotation speed in them has much in common with the rotation speed in stationary Rankine or Burgers vortices. This work is devoted to the study of a novel low-parameter model of stationary vortices. The model is most suitable for describing concentrated vortices in the Earth’s atmosphere. Within the framework of ideal hydrodynamics, a new model of thin vortex filaments is constructed at heights that are small when compared to the vertical scale of the Earth’s atmosphere. Unlike Rankine and Burgers vortices, it allows one to describe the structure limited in the radial direction. Quasi-stationary vortices in such a model arise as a result of the balance of two effects: the concentration of vertical vorticity to the center and the advection of the vortex motion in the vertical direction.
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subjects Advection
Anticyclones
Atmosphere
Atmospheric particulates
Climatology
Computational fluid dynamics
Cyclones
Cyclonic vortexes
Direction
Dust devils
Dust storms
Earth
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth atmosphere
Earth Sciences
Filaments
Fires
Fluid flow
Frameworks
Geophysics/Geodesy
Hydrodynamics
Ideal fluids
Potential flow
Rotation
Small-scale vortices
Storm clouds
Storms
Tornadoes
Vertical vorticity
Vortex filaments
Vortices
Vorticity
Waterspouts
title A Novel Model of Quasi-Stationary Vortices in the Earth’s Atmosphere
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