Instability driven by boundary inflow across shear: a way to circumvent Rayleigh's stability criterion in accretion disks?
R. R. Kerswell

TL;DR
This paper studies a boundary inflow instability in shear flows, revealing how inflow boundary conditions can destabilize otherwise stable flows, with implications for accretion disk dynamics.
Contribution
The paper simplifies the understanding of boundary inflow instability by analyzing a rectilinear shear flow, clarifying the role of boundary conditions and vorticity advection in flow destabilization.
Findings
The instability occurs at inflow boundaries with growth rates depending on inflow ratio η.
It is robust to changes in rotation profiles and physics like viscosity and compressibility.
The instability is unlikely in typical accretion disks due to high Reynolds number and boundary conditions.
Abstract
We investigate the 2D instability recently discussed by Gallet et al. (2010) and Ilin \& Morgulis (2013) which arises when a radial crossflow is imposed on a centrifugally-stable swirling flow. By finding a simpler rectilinear example of the instability - a sheared half plane, the minimal ingredients for the instability are identified and the destabilizing/stabilizing effect of inflow/outflow boundaries clarified. The instability - christened `boundary inflow instability' here - is of critical layer type where this layer is either at the inflow wall and the growth rate is (as found by Ilin \& Morgulis 2013), or in the interior of the flow and the growth rate is where measures the (small) inflow-to-tangential-flow ratio. The instability is robust to changes in the rotation profile even to those which are very Rayleigh-stable and the addition…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
