Effects of tilt on the orientation dynamics of the large-scale circulation in turbulent Rayleigh-B{\'e}nard convection
Dandan Ji, Kunlun Bai, Eric Brown

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how tilting a turbulent Rayleigh-B{\'e}nard convection cell influences the large-scale circulation's orientation, developing a low-dimensional model that accurately predicts tilt effects on circulation dynamics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a quantitative model linking tilt-induced potential to circulation orientation, revealing larger-than-expected forces and extending understanding of tilt effects in turbulent convection.
Findings
Tilt causes a sinusoidal potential in circulation orientation.
Tilt-induced forcing is two orders of magnitude larger than previous predictions.
The model accurately predicts barrier-crossing rates and oscillation frequencies.
Abstract
We experimentally test the effects of tilting a turbulent Rayleigh-B{\'e}nard convection cell on the dynamics of the large-scale circulation (LSC) orientation . The probability distribution of is measured, and used to obtain a tilt-induced potential acting on , which is used in a low-dimensional model of diffusion of in a potential. The form of the potential is sinusoidal in , and linear in tilt angle for small tilt angles, which is explained by a simple geometric model of the vector direction of the mean buoyancy force acting on the LSC. However, the magnitude of the tilt-induced forcing is found to be two orders of magnitude larger than previously predicted. When this parameter is adjusted to match values obtained from the probability distribution of , the diffusive model can quantitatively predict effects of tilt on…
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