Core flows and heat transfer induced by inhomogeneous cooling with sub- and supercritical convection
Wieland Dietrich, Kumiko Hori, Johannes Wicht

TL;DR
This study investigates how inhomogeneous cooling influences core flow patterns and heat transfer in a rotating spherical shell, revealing different flow regimes and the impact of boundary forcing on heat transport and convection suppression.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical analysis of core flows under inhomogeneous cooling, characterizing flow regimes and their effects on heat transfer in a rotating spherical shell.
Findings
Radial inward flow is phase shifted 90° eastwards in the linear regime.
Nonlinear advective flows form spiralling jet-like structures.
Boundary forcing can reduce the net Nusselt number by up to 50%.
Abstract
The amount and spatial pattern of heat extracted from cores of terrestrial planets is ultimately controlled by the thermal structure of the lower rocky mantle. Using the most common model to tackle this problem, a rapidly rotating and differentially cooled spherical shell containing an incompressible and viscous liquid is numerically investigated. To gain the physical basics, we consider a simple, equatorial symmetric perturbation of the CMB heat flux shaped as a spherical harmonic . The thermodynamic properties of the induced flows mainly depend on the degree of nonlinearity parametrised by a horizontal Rayleigh number , where is the relative CMB heat flux anomaly amplitude and is the Rayleigh number which controls radial buoyancy-driven convection. Depending on we characterise three flow regimes through their spatial patterns, heat…
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