Influence of Rotation on Fingering Convection in Planetary Cores
Martin Gray, Celine Guervilly, Graeme Sarson

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how rotation influences fingering convection in planetary cores, revealing diverse flow patterns and their potential impact on magnetic field generation.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of fingering convection under rotation in spherical shells, highlighting flow regimes and their dependence on stratification and rotation.
Findings
Fingering structures become elongated and shift orientation with stratification.
Large-scale flows such as zonal flows and bands are driven by fingering convection.
Flow patterns depend on the ratio of stratification to rotation, N^2/Ω^2.
Abstract
Stably stratified layers are thought to develop at the top of the liquid metallic cores of many terrestrial planets. We consider the case where the thermal gradient is stable but the compositional gradient is unstable, a situation particularly relevant to Mercury. The strong contrast between molecular diffusivities of temperature and composition leads to fingering convection. We investigate this process using hydrodynamical simulations in a rotating spherical shell, systematically varying the stratification strength N relative to the rotation rate . In all regimes, the primary fingering mode forms narrow, elongated structures that shift orientation from the rotation axis to the direction of gravity as exceeds 10. The fingers remain laminar, with transverse scales proportional to thermal stratification but independent of rotation. Fingering convection also drives…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Planetary Science and Exploration · Astro and Planetary Science
