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Geostrophic and chimney regimes in rotating horizontal convection with imposed heat flux

Authors :
Catherine A. Vreugdenhil
Bishakhdatta Gayen
Ross W. Griffiths
Vreugdenhil, Catherine [0000-0002-1808-6274]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 823:57-99
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017.

Abstract

Convection in a rotating rectangular basin with differential thermal forcing at one horizontal boundary is examined using laboratory experiments. The experiments have an imposed heat flux boundary condition, are at large values of the flux Rayleigh number ($Ra_{F}\sim O(10^{13}{-}10^{14})$ based on the box length $L$), use water with Prandtl number $Pr\approx 4$ and have a small depth to length aspect ratio. The results show the conditions for transition from non-rotating horizontal convection governed by an inertial–buoyancy balance in the thermal boundary layer, to circulation governed by geostrophic flow in the boundary layer. The geostrophic balance constrains mean flow and reduces the heat transport as Nusselt number $Nu\sim (Ra_{F}Ro)^{1/6}$, where $Ro=B^{1/2}/f^{3/2}L$ is the convective Rossby number, $B$ is the imposed buoyancy flux and $f$ is the Coriolis parameter. Thus flow in the geostrophic boundary layer regime is governed by the relative roles of horizontal convective accelerations and Coriolis accelerations, or buoyancy and rotation, in the boundary layer. Experimental evidence suggests that for more rapid rotation there is another transition to a regime in which the momentum budget is dominated by fluctuating vertical accelerations in a region of vortical plumes, which we refer to as a ‘chimney’ following related discussion of regions of deep convection in the ocean. Coupling of the chimney convection in the region of destabilising boundary flux to the diffusive boundary layer of horizontal convection in the region of stabilising boundary flux gives heat transport independent of rotation in this ‘inertial chimney’ regime, and the new scaling $Nu\sim Ra_{F}^{1/4}$. Scaling analysis predicts the transition conditions observed in the experiments, as well as a further ‘geostrophic chimney’ regime in which the vertical plumes are controlled by local geostrophy. When $Ro, the convection is also observed to produce a set of large basin-scale gyres at all depths in the time-averaged flow.

Details

ISSN :
14697645 and 00221120
Volume :
823
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be8382b5b2e536f18b3992af9b7b882d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2017.249