Numerical simulations of thermal convection in a rapidly rotating spherical shell cooled inhomogeneously from above |
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Authors: | Zi-Ping Sun Gerald Schubert Gary A. Glatzmaier |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences , University of California , Los Angeles , CA , 90024;2. Department of Earth and Space Sciences , Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California , Los Angeles , CA , 90024;3. Earth and Environmental Sciences Division , Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Los Alamos National Laboratory , Los Alamos , NM , 87545 |
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Abstract: | Abstract Numerical simulations of thermal convection in a rapidly rotating spherical fluid shell with and without inhomogeneous temperature anomalies on the top boundary have been carried out using a three-dimensional, time-dependent, spectral-transform code. The spherical shell of Boussinesq fluid has inner and outer radii the same as those of the Earth's liquid outer core. The Taylor number is 107, the Prandtl number is 1, and the Rayleigh number R is 5Rc (Rc is the critical value of R for the onset of convection when the top boundary is isothermal and R is based on the spherically averaged temperature difference across the shell). The shell is heated from below and cooled from above; there is no internal heating. The lower boundary of the shell is isothermal and both boundaries are rigid and impermeable. Three cases are considered. In one, the upper boundary is isothermal while in the others, temperature anomalies with (l,m) = (3,2) and (6,4) are imposed on the top boundary. The spherically averaged temperature difference across the shell is the same in all three cases. The amplitudes of the imposed temperature anomalies are equal to one-half of the spherically averaged temperature difference across the shell. Convective structures are strongly controlled by both rotation and the imposed temperature anomalies suggesting that thermal inhomogeneities imposed by the mantle on the core have a significant influence on the motions inside the core. The imposed temperature anomaly locks the thermal perturbation structure in the outer part of the spherical shell onto the upper boundary and significantly modifies the velocity structure in the same region. However, the radial velocity structure in the outer part of the shell is different from the temperature perturbation structure. The influence of the imposed temperature anomaly decreases with depth in the shell. Thermal structure and velocity structure are similar and convective rolls are more columnar in the inner part of the shell where the effects of rotation are most dominant. |
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Keywords: | Earth's core mantle rotation thermal convection |
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