Litcius/Paper detail

Scaling behaviour in spherical shell rotating convection with fixed-flux thermal boundary conditions

Robert S. Long, J. E. Mound, Christopher J. Davies, Steven M. Tobias

2020Journal of Fluid Mechanics54 citationsDOI

Abstract

Bottom-heated convection in rotating spherical shells provides a simple analogue for many astrophysical and geophysical fluid systems. We construct a database of 74 three-dimensional numerical convection models to investigate the scaling behaviour of seven diagnostics over a range of Ekman and Rayleigh numbers while using a Prandtl number of unity. Our configuration is chosen to model Earth’s core as defined by the fixed flux thermal boundary conditions, radius ratio of and a gravity profile that varies linearly with radius. The quantities of interest are the viscous and thermal boundary layer thickness, mean temperature gradient, mean interior temperature, Nusselt number, horizontal flow length scale, and Reynolds number. We find four parameter regimes characterised by different scaling behaviour. For and low the weakly nonlinear regime is characterised by a balance between viscous, Archimedean and Coriolis forces and the heat transfer is described by weakly nonlinear theory. At low and moderate , the rapidly rotating regime sees inertia take over from viscosity in the global force balance. In this regime the heat transfer scaling has increasing exponent with decreasing Ekman number and shows no saturation to the diffusion free scaling. At high and all the importance of the Coriolis force gradually decreases and all diagnostics continually change in the transitional regime before approaching the scaling behaviour of non-rotating convection.

Topics & Concepts

MechanicsScalingHeat fluxThermalConvectionConvective heat transferFlux (metallurgy)Materials scienceBoundary value problemPhysicsSpherical shellShell (structure)Heat transferClassical mechanicsThermodynamicsGeometryMathematicsComposite materialQuantum mechanicsMetallurgyGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism StudiesGeological formations and processesCharacterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles