Zonal flow regimes in rotating anelastic spherical shells: an application to giant planets
T. Gastine, J. Wicht, J. M. Aurnou

TL;DR
This paper uses 3D numerical models to study how the balance between buoyancy and rotation influences zonal wind patterns in giant planets, explaining observed jet structures and transitions.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the impact of density stratification and force balance on zonal flows, revealing conditions that produce prograde or retrograde equatorial jets.
Findings
Prograde equatorial jets occur in rotation-dominated regimes.
Retrograde jets emerge when buoyancy dominates, matching ice giant observations.
Density stratification influences jet amplitude and structure.
Abstract
The surface zonal winds observed in the giant planets form a complex jet pattern with alternating prograde and retrograde direction. While the main equatorial band is prograde on the gas giants, both ice giants have a pronounced retrograde equatorial jet. We use three-dimensional numerical models of compressible convection in rotating spherical shells to explore the properties of zonal flows in different regimes where either rotation or buoyancy dominates the force balance. We conduct a systematic parameter study to quantify the dependence of zonal flows on the background density stratification and the driving of convection. We find that the direction of the equatorial zonal wind is controlled by the ratio of buoyancy and Coriolis force. The prograde equatorial band maintained by Reynolds stresses is found in the rotation-dominated regime. In cases where buoyancy dominates Coriolis…
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