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Revision as of 18:41, 4 July 2024 by Joel2 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "__FORCETOC__ <!-- __NOTOC__ --> <font color="red"><b> NOTE to Eric Hirschmann & David Neilsen... </b></font> I have moved the earlier contents of this page to a new Wiki location called Compressible Riemann Ellipsoids. =Rotating Reference Frame= At times, it can be useful to view the motion of a fluid from a frame of reference that is rotating with a uniform (''i.e.,'' time-independent) angular velocity <math>~\Omega_f</math>...")
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NOTE to Eric Hirschmann & David Neilsen... I have moved the earlier contents of this page to a new Wiki location called Compressible Riemann Ellipsoids.

Rotating Reference Frame[edit]

At times, it can be useful to view the motion of a fluid from a frame of reference that is rotating with a uniform (i.e., time-independent) angular velocity Ωf. In order to transform any one of the principal governing equations from the inertial reference frame to such a rotating reference frame, we must specify the orientation as well as the magnitude of the angular velocity vector about which the frame is spinning, Ωf; and the d/dt operator, which denotes Lagrangian time-differentiation in the inertial frame, must everywhere be replaced as follows:

[ddt]inertial[ddt]rot+Ωf×.

Performing this transformation implies, for example, that

vinertial=vrot+Ωf×x,

and,

[dvdt]inertial=[dvdt]rot+2Ωf×vrot+Ωf×(Ωf×x)

=[dvdt]rot+2Ωf×vrot12[|Ωf×x|2]

(If we were to allow Ωf to be a function of time, an additional term involving the time-derivative of Ωf also would appear on the right-hand-side of these last expressions; see, for example, Eq.~1D-42 in BT87.) Note as well that the relationship between the fluid vorticity in the two frames is,

[ζ]inertial=[ζ]rot+2Ωf.


Continuity Equation (rotating frame)[edit]

Applying these transformations to the standard, inertial-frame representations of the continuity equation presented elsewhere, we obtain the:

Lagrangian Representation
of the Continuity Equation
as viewed from a Rotating Reference Frame

[dρdt]rot+ρvrot=0 ;


Eulerian Representation
of the Continuity Equation
as viewed from a Rotating Reference Frame

[ρt]rot+(ρvrot)=0 .


Euler Equation (rotating frame)[edit]

Applying these transformations to the standard, inertial-frame representations of the Euler equation presented elsewhere, we obtain the:

Lagrangian Representation
of the Euler Equation
as viewed from a Rotating Reference Frame

[dvdt]rot=1ρPΦ2Ωf×vrotΩf×(Ωf×x) ;


Eulerian Representation
of the Euler Equation
as viewed from a Rotating Reference Frame

[vt]rot+(vrot)vrot=1ρP[Φ12|Ωf×x|2]2Ωf×vrot ;


Euler Equation
written in terms of the Vorticity and
as viewed from a Rotating Reference Frame

[vt]rot+(ζrot+2Ωf)×vrot=1ρP[Φ+12vrot212|Ωf×x|2] .


Centrifugal and Coriolis Accelerations[edit]

Following along the lines of the discussion presented in Appendix 1.D, §3 of [BT87], in a rotating reference frame the Lagrangian representation of the Euler equation may be written in the form,

[dvdt]rot=1ρPΦ+afict,

where,

afict2Ωf×vrotΩf×(Ωf×x).

So, as viewed from a rotating frame of reference, material moves as if it were subject to two fictitious accelerations which traditionally are referred to as the,

Coriolis Acceleration

aCoriolis2Ωf×vrot,

(see the related Wikipedia discussion) and the

Centrifugal Acceleration

aCentrifugalΩf×(Ωf×x)=12[|Ωf×x|2]

(see the related Wikipedia discussion).

Nonlinear Velocity Cross-Product[edit]

In some contexts — for example, our discussion of Riemann ellipsoids or the analysis by Korycansky & Papaloizou (1996) of nonaxisymmetric disk structures — it proves useful to isolate and analyze the term in the "vorticity formulation" of the Euler equation that involves a nonlinear cross-product of the rotating-frame velocity vector, namely,

A(ζrot+2Ωf)×vrot.

NOTE: To simplify notation, for most of the remainder of this subsection we will drop the subscript "rot" on both the velocity and vorticity vectors.

Align Ωf with z-axis[edit]

Without loss of generality we can set Ωf=k^Ωf, that is, we can align the frame rotation axis with the z-axis of a Cartesian coordinate system. The Cartesian components of A are then,

i^:Ax=ζyvz(ζz+2Ω)vy,

j^:Ay=(ζz+2Ω)vxζxvz,

k^:Az=ζxvyζyvx,

where it is understood that the three Cartesian components of the vorticity vector are,

ζx=[vzyvyz],ζy=[vxzvzx],ζz=[vyxvxy].

In turn, the curl of A has the following three Cartesian components:

i^:[×A]x=y[ζxvyζyvx]z[(ζz+2Ω)vxζxvz],

j^:[×A]y=z[ζyvz(ζz+2Ω)vy]x[ζxvyζyvx],

k^:[×A]z=x[(ζz+2Ω)vxζxvz]y[ζyvz(ζz+2Ω)vy].

When vz = 0[edit]

If we restrict our discussion to configurations that exhibit only planar flows — that is, systems in which vz=0 — then the Cartesian components of A and ×A simplify somewhat to give, respectively,

i^:Ax=(ζz+2Ω)vy,

j^:Ay=(ζz+2Ω)vx,

k^:Az=ζxvyζyvx,

and,

i^:[×A]x=y[ζxvyζyvx]z[(ζz+2Ω)vx],

j^:[×A]y=z[(ζz+2Ω)vy]x[ζxvyζyvx],

k^:[×A]z=x[(ζz+2Ω)vx]+y[(ζz+2Ω)vy],

where, in this case, the three Cartesian components of the vorticity vector are,

ζx=vyz,ζy=vxz,ζz=[vyxvxy].

Related Discussions[edit]

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