Abstract
IT is a well-known hydrodynamical result that, in the absence of any external stabilising influence, any surface of discontinuity of velocity in a fluid must be unstable. The effect of this instability is seen in the eddies produced in a millpond, at the margin of the entering stream. A sufficiently rapid shearing, without actual discontinuity, will produce the same effect. Most atmospheric eddies are developed in this way. In the case of differences of velocity between different masses of air at the same level, gravity is not directly available to damp any eddies that may be produced, and hence it does not seem likely to be difficult to account for eddies with their axes vertical.
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JEFFREYS, H. The Energy of Cyclones. Nature 106, 437 (1920). https://doi.org/10.1038/106437a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/106437a0
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