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Boundary Layer Control of Rotating Convection Systems

TLDR
This work forms a predictive description of the transition between the two regimes on the basis of the competition between these two boundary layers, and unifies the disparate results of an extensive array of previous experiments, and is broadly applicable to natural convection systems.
Abstract
Turbulent rotating convection is an important dynamical process occurring on nearly all planetary and stellar bodies, influencing many observed features such as magnetic fields, atmospheric jets and emitted heat flux patterns. For decades, it has been thought that the importance of rotation's influence on convection depends on the competition between the two relevant forces in the system: buoyancy (non-rotating) and Coriolis (rotating). The force balance argument does not, however, accurately predict the transition from rotationally controlled to non-rotating heat transfer behaviour. New results from laboratory and numerical experiments suggest that the transition is in fact controlled by the relative thicknesses of the thermal (non-rotating) and Ekman (rotating) boundary layers. Turbulent rotating convection controls many observed features in stars and planets, such as magnetic fields. It has been argued that the influence of rotation on turbulent convection dynamics is governed by the ratio of the relevant global-scale forces: the Coriolis force and the buoyancy force. This paper presents results from laboratory and numerical experiments which exhibit transitions between rotationally dominated and non-rotating behaviour that are not determined by this global force balance. Instead, the transition is controlled by the relative thicknesses of the thermal (non-rotating) and Ekman (rotating) boundary layers. Turbulent rotating convection controls many observed features of stars and planets, such as magnetic fields, atmospheric jets and emitted heat flux patterns1,2,3,4,5,6. It has long been argued that the influence of rotation on turbulent convection dynamics is governed by the ratio of the relevant global-scale forces: the Coriolis force and the buoyancy force7,8,9,10,11,12. Here, however, we present results from laboratory and numerical experiments which exhibit transitions between rotationally dominated and non-rotating behaviour that are not determined by this global force balance. Instead, the transition is controlled by the relative thicknesses of the thermal (non-rotating) and Ekman (rotating) boundary layers. We formulate a predictive description of the transition between the two regimes on the basis of the competition between these two boundary layers. This transition scaling theory unifies the disparate results of an extensive array of previous experiments8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15, and is broadly applicable to natural convection systems.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent superstructures in Rayleigh-Bénard convection.

TL;DR: Numerical simulations of turbulent convection in fluids at different Prandtl number levels suggest a scale separation and thus the existence of a simplified description of the turbulent superstructures in geo- and astrophysical settings.
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Current trends and future directions in turbulent thermal convection

TL;DR: In this article, the system of turbulent thermal convection is introduced and progress in recent decades in the four major areas of research in turbulent convection are briefly reviewed, which also serve to point out that the future directions in this important field of fluid mechanics lie in the extension to the nonstandard or non-classical Rayleigh-Benard configuration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Upscale energy transfer in three-dimensional rapidly rotating turbulent convection.

TL;DR: Rotating Rayleigh-Bénard convection exhibits, in the limit of rapid rotation, a turbulent state known as geostrophic turbulence, which is itself unstable to the generation of depth-independent or barotropic vortex structures of ever larger scale through a process known as spectral condensation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laboratory-numerical models of rapidly rotating convection in planetary cores

TL;DR: Cheng et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the behavioural regimes of rapidly rotating convection in high-latitude planetary core-style settings and found that coherent, axial columns have a relatively narrow range of stability.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of magnetic fields in planetary dynamo models

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of magnetic fields on convective dynamo models by contrasting them with non-magnetic, but otherwise identical, simulations is investigated, and it is shown that the characteristics of convection, including convective flow structures and speeds as well as heat transfer efficiency, are not strongly affected by the presence of magnetic forces in most of their models.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Scaling properties of convection-driven dynamos in rotating spherical shells and application to planetary magnetic fields

TL;DR: In this paper, an extensive set of dynamo models in rotating spherical shells, varying all relevant control parameters by at least two orders of magnitude, were studied and their scaling laws were established.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of Bénard convection with and without rotation

TL;DR: In this article, an experimental study of the response of a thin uniformly heated rotating layer of fluid is presented, and it is shown that the stability of the fluid depends strongly upon the three parameters that described its state, namely the Rayleigh number, the Taylor number and the Prandtl number.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convection in Stars I. Basic Boussinesq Convection

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take the optimistic view that present convective models are qualitatively reasonable, what can one expect of an improved theory? One desirable feature would be the prediction of convective transfer with, in addition, some reasonable estimate of the accuracy of the prediction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation of equatorial and high-latitude jets on Jupiter in a deep convection model.

TL;DR: This work presents a numerical model of three-dimensional rotating convection in a relatively thin spherical shell that generates both types of jets and implies that Jupiter's latitudinal transition in jet width corresponds to a separation between the bottom-bounded flow structures in higher latitudes and the deep equatorial flows.
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