The impact of rotation on turbulent tidal friction in stellar and planetary convective regions
St\'ephane Mathis, Pierre Auclair-Desrotour, Mathieu Guenel, Florian, Gallet, Christophe Le Poncin-Lafitte

TL;DR
This paper develops a new model for turbulent tidal friction in rotating stellar and planetary convective regions, accounting for the effects of rotation on turbulence and tidal dissipation.
Contribution
It introduces a rotation-dependent prescription for turbulent eddy-viscosity based on recent simulations, improving the understanding of tidal dissipation in rotating stars and planets.
Findings
Eddy-viscosity decreases significantly with rapid rotation.
Rotation alters the efficiency of tidal energy dissipation.
Resonant dissipation of inertial waves becomes more prominent in fast rotators.
Abstract
Turbulent friction in convective regions in stars and planets is one of the key physical mechanisms that drive the dissipation of the kinetic energy of tidal flows in their interiors and the evolution of their systems. This friction acts both on the equilibrium/non-wave like tide and on tidal inertial waves in these layers. It is thus necessary to obtain a robust prescription for this friction. In the current state-of-the-art, it is modeled by a turbulent eddy-viscosity coefficient, based on mixing-length theory, applied on velocities of tides. However, none of the current prescriptions take into account the action of rotation that can strongly affects turbulent convection. Therefore, we use theoretical scaling laws for convective velocities and characteristic lengthscales in rotating stars and planets that have been recently confirmed by 3-D high-resolution nonlinear Cartesian…
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