Reynolds number scaling and energy spectra in geostrophic convection
Matteo Madonia, Andr\'es J. Aguirre Guzm\'an, Herman J. H. Clercx,, Rudie P. J. Kunnen

TL;DR
This study investigates flow dynamics in geostrophic convection at extremely low Ekman numbers, analyzing velocity scaling, energy spectra, and flow organization to understand turbulence development and force balances.
Contribution
It provides new experimental data on velocity scaling and energy spectra in geostrophic convection at very low Ekman numbers, highlighting the approach to diffusion-free turbulence.
Findings
Velocity fluctuations scale consistent with multiple force balance theories.
Flow organizes into a quadrupolar vortex structure.
Energy spectra develop a -5/3 inertial range at high Rayleigh numbers.
Abstract
We report flow measurements in rotating Rayleigh--B\'enard convection in the rotationally-constrained geostrophic regime. We apply stereoscopic particle image velocimetry to measure the three components of velocity in a horizontal cross-section of a water-filled cylindrical convection vessel. At a constant, small Ekman number we vary the Rayleigh number between and to cover various subregimes observed in geostrophic convection. We also include one nonrotating experiment. The scaling of the velocity fluctuations (expressed as the Reynolds number ) is compared to theoretical relations expressing balances of viscous--Archimedean--Coriolis (VAC) and Coriolis--inertial--Archimedean (CIA) forces. Based on our results we cannot decide which balance is most applicable here; both scaling relations match equally well. A comparison of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
