The 'Rayleigh-Taylor instability', or 'RT instability' (after
Lord Rayleigh and
G. I. Taylor), occurs any time a
dense, heavy
fluid is being accelerated by light fluid. This is the case with a cloud and shock system, or when a fluid of a certain density floats above a fluid of lesser density, such as dense oil floating above water.
Two completely plane-parallel layers of
immiscible fluid are in equilibrium, but the slightest perturbation leads to release of potential energy, as the heavier material moves down under the (effective) gravitational field, and the lighter material is displaced upwards. As the instability develops, downward-moving irregularities ('dimples') are quickly magnified into sets of inter-penetrating ''RT fingers''. The upward-moving, lighter material behaves like 'Spherical Cap Bubbles'.
This process is evident not only in many terrestrial examples, from
salt domes to
weather inversions, but also in
astrophysics and
electrohydrodynamics. RT fingers are especially obvious in the
Crab Nebula, in which the expanding
pulsar wind nebula powered by the
Crab pulsar is sweeping up ejected material from the
supernova explosion 1000 years ago.
Note that the RT instability is not to be confused with the
Rayleigh instability (or
Plateau-Rayleigh instability) of a liquid jet. This latter instability, sometimes called the hosepipe (or firehose) instability, occurs due to surface tension, which acts to break a cylindrical jet into a stream of droplets having the same volume but lower surface area.
Footnotes
1. Parallel AMR Code for Compressible MHD or HD Equations Li, Shengtai and Hui Li
See also
★
Richtmyer-Meshkov instability
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Kelvin-Helmholtz instability
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Mushroom cloud
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Plateau-Rayleigh instability
★
Salt fingering
External links
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Java demonstration of the RT instability in fluids
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Actual images and videos of RT fingers
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Experiments on Rayleigh-Taylor experiments at the University of Arizona
References
Original research papers:
Rayleigh, Lord (John William Strutt), "Investigation of the character of the equilibrium of an incompressible heavy fluid of variable density," ''Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society'', Vol. 14, pages 170 - 177 (1883). (Original paper is available at: https://www.irphe.univ-mrs.fr/~clanet/otherpaperfile/articles/Rayleigh/rayleigh1883.pdf .)
Taylor, Sir Geoffrey Ingram, "The instability of liquid surfaces when accelerated in a direction perpendicular to their planes," ''Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences'', Vol. 201, No. 1065, pages 192 - 196 (22 March 1950).