Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Latitudinal regionalization of rotating spherical shell convection

View through CrossRef
Convection occurs ubiquitously on and in rotating geophysical and astrophysical bodies. Prior spherical shell studies have shown that the convection dynamics in polar regions can differ significantly from the lower latitude, equatorial dynamics. Yet most spherical shell convective scaling laws use globally-averaged quantities that erase latitudinal differences in the physics. Here we quantify those latitudinal differences by analysing spherical shell simulations in terms of their regionalized convective heat-transfer properties. This is done by measuring local Nusselt numbers in two specific, latitudinally separate, portions of the shell, the polar and the equatorial regions, $Nu_p$ and $Nu_e$ , respectively. In rotating spherical shells, convection first sets in outside the tangent cylinder such that equatorial heat transfer dominates at small and moderate supercriticalities. We show that the buoyancy forcing, parameterized by the Rayleigh number $Ra$ , must exceed the critical equatorial forcing by a factor of ${\approx }20$ to trigger polar convection within the tangent cylinder. Once triggered, $Nu_p$ increases with $Ra$ much faster than does $Nu_e$ . The equatorial and polar heat fluxes then tend to become comparable at sufficiently high $Ra$ . Comparisons between the polar convection data and Cartesian numerical simulations reveal quantitative agreement between the two geometries in terms of heat transfer and averaged bulk temperature gradient. This agreement indicates that rotating spherical shell convection dynamics is accessible both through spherical simulations and via reduced investigatory pathways, be they theoretical, numerical or experimental.
Title: Latitudinal regionalization of rotating spherical shell convection
Description:
Convection occurs ubiquitously on and in rotating geophysical and astrophysical bodies.
Prior spherical shell studies have shown that the convection dynamics in polar regions can differ significantly from the lower latitude, equatorial dynamics.
Yet most spherical shell convective scaling laws use globally-averaged quantities that erase latitudinal differences in the physics.
Here we quantify those latitudinal differences by analysing spherical shell simulations in terms of their regionalized convective heat-transfer properties.
This is done by measuring local Nusselt numbers in two specific, latitudinally separate, portions of the shell, the polar and the equatorial regions, $Nu_p$ and $Nu_e$ , respectively.
In rotating spherical shells, convection first sets in outside the tangent cylinder such that equatorial heat transfer dominates at small and moderate supercriticalities.
We show that the buoyancy forcing, parameterized by the Rayleigh number $Ra$ , must exceed the critical equatorial forcing by a factor of ${\approx }20$ to trigger polar convection within the tangent cylinder.
Once triggered, $Nu_p$ increases with $Ra$ much faster than does $Nu_e$ .
The equatorial and polar heat fluxes then tend to become comparable at sufficiently high $Ra$ .
Comparisons between the polar convection data and Cartesian numerical simulations reveal quantitative agreement between the two geometries in terms of heat transfer and averaged bulk temperature gradient.
This agreement indicates that rotating spherical shell convection dynamics is accessible both through spherical simulations and via reduced investigatory pathways, be they theoretical, numerical or experimental.

Related Results

Grain size evolution and heat transfer regime in the shells of icy moons 
Grain size evolution and heat transfer regime in the shells of icy moons 
IntroductionTogether with  the ice shell thickness, grain size due to its effect on viscosity is perhaps the most crucial parameter determining the heat transfer regime inside the ...
Impact of the number of donor catchments and the efficiency threshold on regionalization performance of hydrological models
Impact of the number of donor catchments and the efficiency threshold on regionalization performance of hydrological models
<p>Over recent decades, hydrologists have proposed a variety of methods to predict discharge in ungauged catchments, and significant progress has been made in the fie...
Effect of ocean heat flux on Titan's topography and tectonic stresses
Effect of ocean heat flux on Titan's topography and tectonic stresses
INTRODUCTIONThe thermo-mechanical evolution of Titan's ice shell is primarily controlled by the mode of the heat transfer in the ice shell and the amount of heat coming from the oc...
Transverse roll convection in horizontal plane Couette flow
Transverse roll convection in horizontal plane Couette flow
The structure of thermal convection in horizontal plane Couette flow is investigated. Numerical experiments show that transformation of the structure takes place in the linear stag...
Eccentricity variations trigger “subduction” in Europa’s ice shell
Eccentricity variations trigger “subduction” in Europa’s ice shell
IntroductionIcy moon Europa possesses one of the youngest surfaces in the Solar System. Overall smooth, yet rich in unique tectonic features, it records mostly extensional processe...
Experimental research on compressive strength of UHPC spherical hinge
Experimental research on compressive strength of UHPC spherical hinge
Purpose In order to reduce the impact of bridge construction on traffic under the bridge, the construction of bridges for some important traffic nodes usually adopts the swivel con...
Impacts of man-made structures on marine biodiversity and species status - native & non-native species
Impacts of man-made structures on marine biodiversity and species status - native & non-native species
<p>Coastal environments are exposed to anthropogenic activities such as frequent marine traffic and restructuring, i.e., addition, removal or replacing with man-made structur...
Callista chione &#8211; geochemical archive of &#948;18O and &#948;13C data
Callista chione &#8211; geochemical archive of &#948;18O and &#948;13C data
&lt;p&gt;The Smooth clam &lt;em&gt;Callista chione&lt;/em&gt; is a commercially important venerid bivalve. It is widely distributed in the eastern Atlantic ...

Back to Top