Excitation of Inertial Modes in 3D Simulations of Rotating Convection in Planets and Stars
J. R. Fuentes, Ankit Barik, Jim Fuller

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that inertial modes naturally arise in 3D simulations of rotating convection in stars and planets, especially when rotation dominates, driven by differential rotation instabilities rather than external forcing.
Contribution
It reveals that inertial modes can emerge spontaneously in rotating turbulent convection without external excitation, depending on the Rossby number and fluid properties.
Findings
Inertial modes appear only when Rossby number < 0.5.
Modes are retrograde, equatorially symmetric, and at mid/high latitudes.
Lower viscosity and Prandtl number enhance mode excitation.
Abstract
Thermal convection in rotating stars and planets drives anisotropic turbulence and differential rotation, both capable of feeding energy into global oscillations. Using 3D simulations of rotating convection in spherical shells, we show that inertial modes--oscillations restored by the Coriolis force--emerge naturally in rotationally constrained turbulence, without imposing any external forcing other than thermal/buoyancy driving. By varying the rotation rate at fixed Rayleigh number, we find that coherent modes appear only when the convective Rossby number, the ratio of the rotation period to the convective turnover time, falls below about one-half, where rotation dominates the dynamics. These modes are mostly retrograde in the rotating frame, equatorially symmetric, and confined to mid and high latitudes, with discrete frequencies well below twice the background rotation rate. At lower…
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