Abstract
The stability of two-dimensional convection rolls has been studied as a function of the Rayleigh number, wavenumber and variation in viscosity. The experiments used controlled initial conditions for the wavenumber, Rayleigh numbers up to 25 000 and variations in viscosity up to a factor of about 20. The parameter range of stable rolls is bounded by a hexagonal-cell regime at small Rayleigh numbers and large variations in viscosity. Otherwise, the rolls are subject to the same transitions as have already been studied in fluids of uniform viscosity. The bimodal instability leading to a stable three-dimensional pattern occurs at smaller values of the average Rayleigh number as the variations in viscosity increase. This appears to be a consequence of the low viscosity of the warm thermal boundary layer associated with the original rolls.

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