How do tidal waves interact with convective vortices in rapidly-rotating planets and stars?
Virgile Dandoy, Junho Park, Kyle Augustson, Aur\'elie Astoul,, St\'ephane Mathis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how tidal inertial waves interact with large-scale convective vortices in rapidly rotating planets and stars, revealing complex behaviors including turbulence and wave emission that depend on vortex stability.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical model and linear analysis to study wave-vortex interactions, highlighting effects beyond simple eddy-viscosity approximations.
Findings
Unstable vortices trigger turbulent dissipation when interacting with tidal waves.
Stable vortices cause momentum mixing and generate secondary wave-like perturbations.
Wave emission is strongest when the wave wavelength matches the vortex size.
Abstract
The dissipation of tidal inertial waves in planetary and stellar convective regions is one of the key mechanisms that drive the evolution of star-planet/planet-moon systems. In this context, the interaction between tidal inertial waves and turbulent convective flows must be modelled in a realistic and robust way. In the state-of-the-art simulations, the friction applied by convection on tidal waves is modelled most of the time by an effective eddy-viscosity. This approach may be valid when the characteristic length scales of convective eddies are smaller than those of tidal waves. However, it becomes highly questionable in the case where tidal waves interact with potentially stable large-scale vortices, as those observed at the pole of Jupiter and Saturn. They are potentially triggered by convection in rapidly-rotating bodies in which the Coriolis acceleration forms the flow in columnar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
