Direct driving of simulated planetary jets by upscale energy transfer
Vincent G. A. B\"oning, Paula Wulff, Wieland Dietrich, Johannes Wicht,, Ulrich R. Christensen

TL;DR
This study shows that planetary jets are primarily driven by direct upscale energy transfer from small-scale convection, not by an inverse cascade, challenging previous assumptions about jet formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that jets are formed through direct energy transfer from small-scale convection, revealing a nonlocal spectral transfer process in planetary interior simulations.
Findings
Jets are driven by direct upscale transfer from small-scale convection.
Large-scale vortices are not primarily formed by inverse cascade.
Jet kinetic energy scales as b5^{-5}, similar to zonostrophic regimes.
Abstract
The precise mechanism that forms jets and large-scale vortices on the giant planets is unknown. An inverse cascade has been suggested. Alternatively, energy may be directly injected by small-scale convection. Our aim is to clarify whether an inverse cascade feeds zonal jets and large-scale eddies in a system of rapidly rotating, deep, geostrophic spherical-shell convection. We analyze the nonlinear scale-to-scale transfer of kinetic energy in such simulations as a function of the azimuthal wave number, m. We find that the main driving of the jets is associated with upscale transfer directly from the small convective scales to the jets. This transfer is very nonlocal in spectral space, bypassing large-scale structures. The jet formation is thus not driven by an inverse cascade. Instead, it is due to a direct driving by Reynolds stresses from small-scale convective flows. Initial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
