4.5 Article

Convective heat transfer in planetary dynamo models

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2010GC003053

Keywords

dynamo; fluid dynamics; heat transfer; convection; core; turbulence

Funding

  1. NSF
  2. NASA
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [0944312] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The magnetic fields of planets and stars are generated by the motions of electrically conducting fluids within them. These fluid motions are thought to be driven by convective processes, as internal heat is transported outward. The efficiency with which heat is transferred by convection is integral in understanding dynamo processes. Several heat transfer scaling laws have been proposed, but the range of parameter space to which they apply has not been firmly established. Following the plane layer convection study by King et al. (2009), we explore a broad range of buoyancy forcing (Ra) and rotation strength (E-1) to show that heat transfer (Nu) in spherical dynamo simulations occurs in two distinct regimes. We argue that heat transfer scales as Nu similar to Ra-6/5 in the rapidly rotating regime and Nu similar to Ra-2/7 in the weakly rotating regime. The transition between these two regimes is controlled by the competition between the thermal and viscous boundary layers. Boundary layer scaling theory allows us to predict that the transition between the regimes occurs at a transitional Rayleigh number, Ra-t = E (7/4). Furthermore, boundary layer control of heat transfer is shown to relate to the interior temperature profiles of the models. In the weakly rotating regime, the interior fluid is nearly adiabatic. In the rapidly rotating regime, adverse mean temperature gradients abide, irrespective of the Reynolds number (Re). Extrapolating our results to Earth's core, we estimate that core convection resides in the rapidly rotating regime, with Ra approximate to 2 x 10(24) (Ra/Ra-t approximate to 0.02), corresponding to a superadiabatic density variation of Delta rho/rho(o) approximate to 10(-7), which is significantly below the sensitivity of present seismic observations.

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