Title : Geostrophic turbulence and the formation of large scale structures
Speaker: Professor Edgar Knobloch (Erceg Fellow 2019)
Affiliation: University of California at Berkeley
Time: 12:00 pm Tuesday, 27 November, 2018
Location: PLT2/303-G02
Abstract
Low Rossby number convection is studied using an asymptotically reduced system of equations valid in the limit of strong rotation. The equations describe four regimes as the Rayleigh number Ra increases: a disordered cellular regime near threshold, a regime of weakly interacting convective Taylor columns at larger Ra, followed for yet larger Ra by a breakdown of the convective Taylor columns into a disordered plume regime characterized by reduced heat transport efficiency, and finally by a new type of turbulence called geostrophic turbulence. Properties of this state will be described and illustrated using direct numerical simulations of the reduced equations. These simulations reveal that geostrophic turbulence is unstable to the formation of large scale barotropic vortices or jets, via a process known as spectral condensation. The details of this process are quantified and its implications explored. The results are corroborated via direct numerical simulations of the Navier-Stokes equations.

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