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A study of a stably stratified hydromagnetic fluid in a rotating cylinder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

David E. Loper
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Institute, Florida State University, Tallahassee

Abstract

Slow, steady, mechanically driven, axisymmetric motion of a stably stratified, electrically conducting, rotating fluid is studied. Attention is focused upon the parameter values for which hydromagnetic effects first become important in a rotating stratified fluid and upon the nature of their influence on the interior flow of that fluid. It is found that hydromagnetic effects are able to alter the flow of a stratified rotating fluid at much weaker magnetic field strengths than the flow of an unstratified fluid. Specifically, the interior azimuthal flow is altered if E2 [Lt ] σS [Lt ] 1 or if E [Lt ] α2 and 1 [Lt ] σS, where E = ν/ΩL2, $E = \nu/\Omega L^2,\quad\alpha^2 = \overline{\sigma}B^2/\rho\Omega $ and $S = \overline{\alpha}\Delta Tg\nu/\Omega^2\kappa L$. The hydromagnetic effects act to decrease the vertical shear in the azimuthal flow from the levels which would occur in the absence of magnetic fields.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1976 Cambridge University Press

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