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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

Dynamo Scaling Laws and Applications to the Planets

TL;DR: The scaling laws for planetary dynamos relate the characteristic magnetic field strength, characteristic flow velocity and other properties to primary quantities such as core size, rotation rate, electrical conductivity and heat flux as discussed by the authors.
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On the genesis of the Earth's magnetism

TL;DR: The geophysical relevance of the experiments and simulations is called into question: the dynamics of Earth's core are too complex, and operate across time and length scales too broad to be captured by any single laboratory experiment, or resolved on present-day computers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical and physical balances in low Rossby number Rayleigh–Bénard convection

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied rapid rotating Rayleigh-benard convection using an asymptotically reduced equation set valid in the limit of low Rossby numbers and identified four distinct dynamical regimes: a disordered cellular regime near threshold, a regime of weakly interacting convective Taylor columns at larger Rayleigh numbers, followed by a breakdown of the convective columns into disordered plume regime characterized by reduced efficiency and finally by geostrophic turbulence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heat transfer by rapidly rotating Rayleigh–Bénard convection

TL;DR: In this paper, an exact scaling law for heat transfer by geostrophic convection, by considering the stability of the thermal boundary layers, where, and are the Nusselt, Rayleigh and Ekman numbers, respectively, and is the critical Rayleigh number for the onset of convection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rotating convective turbulence in Earth and planetary cores

TL;DR: In this paper, a closely coupled suite of advanced asymptotically-reduced theoretical models, efficient Cartesian direct numerical simulations (DNS) and laboratory experiments are presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Heat transport by turbulent rotating Rayleigh–Bénard convection and its dependence on the aspect ratio

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of rotation about a vertical axis on heat transport by turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection in a cylindrical vessel with an aspect ratio was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prograde, retrograde, and oscillatory modes in rotating Rayleigh–Bénard convection

TL;DR: In this paper, the sparsity-promoting variant of the dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) is used to extract coherent structures that govern the dynamics of the flow, as well as their associated frequencies.

Convective Heat Transfer and the Pattern of Thermal Emission on the Gas Giants

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present numerical models of rapidly rotating, turbulent 3-D convection in geometrically thin, uniformly forced layers of Boussinesq fluid that approximate the deep convection zones of Jupiter and Saturn.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extracting scaling laws from numerical dynamo models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use an extensive data set of 116 numerical dynamo models compiled by Christensen and co-workers to analyse these scalings from a rigorous model selection point of view.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic similarity, the dimensionless science

TL;DR: Dimensional analysis, a framework for drawing physical parallels between systems of disparate scale, affords key insights into natural phenomena too expansive and too energetic to replicate in the lab.
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