4.6 Article

Tidally forced turbulence in planetary interiors

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 208, Issue 3, Pages 1690-1703

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggw479

Keywords

Numerical solutions; Instability analysis; Tides and planetary waves; Core; outer core and inner core; Planetary interiors

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) Geophysics Program
  2. NASA PG&G (Planetary Geology and Geophysics) Program
  3. ANR-JCJC-SIMI5 program [ANR-13-JS05-0004-01]
  4. IDRIS (Institut du Developpement et des Ressources en Informatique Scientifique) [100508, 100614]
  5. HPC resources of Aix-Marseille Universite - project Equip@Meso of the program Investissements d'Avenir [ANR-10-EQPX-29-01]
  6. Agence Nationale pour la Recherche [15b011, 16b020]
  7. Directorate For Geosciences [1547269] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Division Of Earth Sciences [1547269] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-13-JS05-0004] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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The turbulence generated in the liquid metal cores and subsurface oceans of planetary bodies may be due to the role of mechanical forcing through precession/nutation, libration, tidal forcing and collisions. Here, we model the response of an enclosed constant density fluid to tidal forcing by combining laboratory equatorial velocity measurements with selected highresolution numerical simulations to show, for the first time, the generation of bulk filling turbulence. The transition to saturated turbulence is characterized by an elliptical instability that first excites primary inertial modes of the system, then secondary inertial modes forced by the primary inertial modes, and then bulk filling turbulence. The amplitude of this saturated turbulence scales with the body's elliptical distortion, U similar to beta, while a time-and radially averaged azimuthal zonal flow scales with beta(2). The results of the current tidal experiments are compared with recent studies of the libration-driven turbulent flows studied by Grannan et al. and Favier et al. Tides and libration correspond to two end-member types of geophysical mechanical forcings. For satellites dominated by tidal forcing, the ellipsoidal boundary enclosing the internal fluid layers is elastically deformed while, for librational forcing, the core-mantle boundary possesses an inherently rigid, frozen-in ellipsoidal shape. We find striking similarities between tidally and librationally driven flow transitions to bulk turbulence and zonal flows. This suggests a generic fluid response independent of the style of mechanical forcing. Since beta less than or similar to 10-4 in planetary bodies, it is often argued that mechanically driven zonal velocities will be small. In contrast, our linear scaling for mechanically driven bulk turbulence, U similar to beta, suggests geophysically significant velocities that can play a significant role in planetary processes including tidal dissipation and magnetic field generation.

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