The authors study the Rayleigh-Taylor instability for two incompressible immiscible fluids with or without surface tension, evolving with a free interface in the presence of a uniform gravitational field in Eulerian coordinates. To deal with the free surface, instead of using the transformation to Lagrangian coordinates, the perturbed equations in Eulerian coordinates are transformed to an integral form and the two-fluid flow is formulated as a single-fluid flow in a fixed domain, thus offering an alternative approach to deal with the jump conditions at the free interface. First, the linearized problem around the steady state which describes a denser immiscible fluid lying above a light one with a free interface separating the two fluids, both fluids being in(unstable) equilibrium is analyzed. By a general method of studying a family of modes, the smooth(when restricted to each fluid domain) solutions to the linearized problem that grow exponentially fast in time in Sobolev spaces are constructed, thus leading to a global instability result for the linearized problem.Then, by using these pathological solutions, the global instability for the corresponding nonlinear problem in an appropriate sense is demonstrated.
We investigate the nonlinear instability of a smooth steady density profile solution to the threedimensional nonhomogeneous incompressible Navier-Stokes equations in the presence of a uniform gravitational field,including a Rayleigh-Taylor steady-state solution with heavier density with increasing height(referred to the Rayleigh-Taylor instability).We first analyze the equations obtained from linearization around the steady density profile solution.Then we construct solutions to the linearized problem that grow in time in the Sobolev space H k,thus leading to a global instability result for the linearized problem.With the help of the constructed unstable solutions and an existence theorem of classical solutions to the original nonlinear equations,we can then demonstrate the instability of the nonlinear problem in some sense.Our analysis shows that the third component of the velocity already induces the instability,which is different from the previous known results.