Precessing spherical shells: flows, dissipation, dynamo and the lunar core
David C\'ebron (ISTerre), Rapha\"el Laguerre, Jerome Noir (ETHZ),, Nathana\"el Schaeffer

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates precession-driven flows, instabilities, turbulence, and dynamo action in spherical shells, providing new scaling laws and insights into planetary core dynamics and magnetic field generation.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive simulation-based analysis of precession effects in spherical shells, including new theoretical onsets, dissipation estimates, and dynamo behavior at low viscosities.
Findings
Inner core has little effect on instability onset.
Dissipation mainly occurs in boundary layers.
Large-scale vortices are crucial for precession dynamos.
Abstract
Precession of planets or moons affects internal liquid layers by driving flows, instabilities and possibly dynamos.The energy dissipated by these phenomena can influence orbital parameters such as the planet's spin rate.However, there is no systematic study of these flows in the spherical shell geometry relevant for planets, and the lack of scaling law prevents convincing extrapolation to celestial bodies.We have run more than 900 simulations of fluid spherical shells affected by precession, to systematically study basic flows, instabilities, turbulence, and magnetic field generation.We observe no significant effects of the inner core on the onset of the instabilities.We obtain an analytical estimate of the viscous dissipation, mostly due to boundary layer friction in our simulations.We propose theoretical onsets for hydrodynamic instabilities, and document the intensity of turbulent…
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