<p>The dynamics of flows in density-stratified fluids has been and remains now an important topic for scientific enquiry. Such flows arise in many contexts, ranging from industrial settings to the oceanic and atmospheric environments. It is the latter topic which is the focus of this book. Both the
Environmental Stratified Flows
β Scribed by Vincenzo Armenio (auth.), Vincenzo Armenio, Sutanu Sarkar (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Wien
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 238
- Series
- CISM International Centre for Mechanical Sciences 479
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Stratified flows, common in environmental and geophysical applications, are charΒ acterized by the variation of fluid density in the vertical direction that can result in qualitative and quantitative modifications of the flow patterns by buoyancy . Unstable stratification (dense water/air above light water/air) increases the verΒ tical mixing by generation of convective cells while stable stratification generally suppresses vertical mixing of mass and momentum. Even so, a stably stratified fluid can support internal waves, instabilities and turbulence that play a critical role in transport and mixing. The ocean is predominantly subject to stable stratification which, under exterΒ nal excitation, supports an environment of internal waves which may then break and generate turbulence. Wind forcing, currents and convective plumes are other sources of turbulence in the ocean. In the ocean, stratified turbulence mediates the upward transport of bottom water, nutrients, chemical and biological species, and pollutants. In the atmosphere, stratification affects the transport of pollutants released at ground level, a critical problem being the thermal inversion in urban areas that causes the stagnation of pollutants and small particulate (PM2.5 to PMIO) in the lower part of the atmospheric boundary layer. In buildings, stratΒ ification governs the circulation of air and heat in natural ventilation systems.
β¦ Table of Contents
Mathematical modeling of Stratified flows....Pages 1-73
Internal gravity waves in geophysical fluids....Pages 75-131
Prototypical examples of stratified shear flow....Pages 133-178
The atmospheric boundary layer....Pages 179-232
β¦ Subjects
Fluids; Numerical and Computational Methods in Engineering; Engineering Fluid Dynamics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book provides an account of stratified flows as they are relevant to the ocean and atmosphere, with a primary focus on meso-scale phenomena. The first three chapters deal with oceanic and atmospheric internal solitary waves as a significant component of the dynamics of the coastal ocean and the
<p>The present lecture notes cover a first course in th~ most common types of stratified flows encountered in EnvironΒ mental Hydraulics. Most of the flows are buoyancy flows, i.e. currents in which gravity acts on small density differences. Part I presents the basic concepts of stagnant, densit- st