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Stewartson layers, inertial waves and wave instabilities in a spherical-gap flow

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Stewartson layers, inertial waves and wave instabilities in a spherical-gap flow (Tienda española)

Laboratory experiments with full optical access

Michael Hoff (Autor)

Previo

Indice, PDF (58 KB)
Lectura de prueba, PDF (160 KB)

ISBN-13 (Impresion) 9783736996441
ISBN-13 (E-Book) 9783736986442
Idioma Inglés
Numero de paginas 238
Edicion 1.
Lugar de publicacion Göttingen
Lugar de la disertacion Cottbus
Fecha de publicacion 08.10.2017
Clasificacion simple Tesis doctoral
Area Física
Astrofísica y astronomía
Geociencias
Física de los cuerpos terrestres
Mecánica de medida
Palabras claves Stewartson, layers, spherical-gap
Descripcion

Many planetary bodies in our solar system consist of a solid inner and a liquid outer core, surrounded by a solid mantle. Planetary cores do not rotate constantly but undergo certain variations in the angular speed due to gravitational couplings. Such rotational background systems have a significant influence on the fluid in the interior of planets and stars. It is worth to know the interaction between the core rotation and the interior of the fluid to understand tidal heating, fluid mixing, or the generation of magnetic fields. An opportunity to explore aspects of the dynamics in planetary cores is to do laboratory experiments. The present work focuses on experiments in a rapidly rotating fluid between two spherical shells. A common feature arising in such systems is the occurrence of inertial waves, which are Coriolis-restored propagating internal oscillations. In a system where the inner sphere oscillates around a mean angular speed, inertial waves appear as plane waves. Their excitation efficiency and reflection behavior at inclined walls as well as their tendency to form wave attractors is investigated. In a system where the spheres rotate differentially, so-called global inertial modes arise. Besides the investigation of mode excitation, structure and interaction, the present study reveals a new secondary instability of inertial modes characterized by a clear transition to small-scale turbulence. Finally, the formation of the Stewartson layer is investigated for both forcing systems. Especially the shear instability of the Stewartson layer leads to wave motions, so-called Rossby waves, whose very particular properties in the spherical gap are studied. It is found that these Rossby waves play a crucial role for mode selection in a rapidly rotating fluid between spherical shells.