Reversal and amplification of zonal flows by boundary enforced thermal wind
Wieland Dietrich, Thomas Gastine, Johannes Wicht

TL;DR
This study investigates how boundary-enforced thermal wind anomalies can reverse and amplify zonal flows in rapidly rotating celestial objects, revealing mechanisms that could explain observed differences between planets like Jupiter and Uranus.
Contribution
It demonstrates that thermal boundary anomalies can linearly amplify ageostrophic flows and invert geostrophic flows, providing a new understanding of planetary zonal flow variations.
Findings
Thermal anomalies linearly amplify ageostrophic flows.
Geostrophic flows are suppressed at low anomaly amplitudes.
Inversion of geostrophic flows occurs beyond a critical anomaly threshold.
Abstract
Zonal flows in rapidly-rotating celestial objects such as the Sun, gas or ice giants form in a variety of surface patterns and amplitudes. Whereas the differential rotation on the Sun, Jupiter and Saturn features a super-rotating equatorial region, the ice giants, Neptune and Uranus harbour an equatorial jet slower than the planetary rotation. Global numerical models covering the optically thick, deep-reaching and rapidly rotating convective envelopes of gas giants reproduce successfully the prograde jet at the equator. In such models, convective columns shaped by the dominant Coriolis force typically exhibit a consistent prograde tilt. Hence angular momentum is pumped away from the rotation axis via Reynolds stresses. Those models are found to be strongly geostrophic, hence a modulation of the zonal flow structure along the axis of rotation, e.g. introduced by persistent latitudinal…
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