281 research outputs found
Gyroscopic pumping of large-scale flows in stellar interiors, and application to Lithium Dip stars
The maintenance of large-scale differential rotation in stellar convective
regions by rotationally influenced convective stresses also drives large-scale
meridional flows by angular--momentum conservation. This process is an example
of ``gyroscopic pumping'', and has recently been studied in detail in the solar
context. An important question concerns the extent to which these
gyroscopically pumped meridional flows penetrate into nearby stably stratified
(radiative) regions, since they could potentially be an important source of
non-local mixing. Here we present an extensive study of the gyroscopic pumping
mechanism, using a combination of analytical calculations and numerical
simulations both in Cartesian geometry and in spherical geometry. The various
methods, when compared with one another, provide physical insight into the
process itself, as well as increasingly sophisticated means of estimating the
gyroscopic pumping rate. As an example of application, we investigate the
effects of this large-scale mixing process on the surface abundances of the
light elements Li and Be for stars in the mass range 1.3-1.5 solar masses
(so-called ``Li-dip stars''). We find that gyroscopic pumping is a very
efficient mechanism for circulating material between the surface and the deep
interior, so much in fact that it over-estimates Li and Be depletion by orders
of magnitude for stars on the hot side of the dip.However, when the diffusion
of chemical species back into the surface convection zone is taken into
account, a good fit with observed surface abundances of Li and Be as a function
of stellar mass in the Hyades cluster can be found for reasonable choices of
model parameters.Comment: Submitted to Ap
On rotationally driven meridional flows in stars
A quasi-steady state model of the consequences of rotation on the
hydrodynamical structure of a stellar radiative zone is derived, by studying in
particular the role of centrifugal and baroclinic driving of meridional motions
in angular-momentum transport. This nonlinear problem is solved numerically
assuming axisymmetry of the system, and within some limits, it is shown that
there exist simple analytical solutions. The limit of slow rotation recovers
Eddington-Sweet theory, whereas it is shown that in the limit of rapid
rotation, the system settles into a geostrophic equilibrium. The behaviour of
the system is found to be controlled by one parameter only, linked to the
Prantl number, the stratification and the rotation rate of the star.Comment: 5 pages, submitted to MNRAS Letter
On the Penetration of Meridional Circulation below the Solar Convection Zone II: Models with Convection Zone, the Taylor-Proudman constraint and Applications to Other Stars
The solar convection zone exhibits a strong level of differential rotation,
whereby the rotation period of the polar regions is about 25-30% longer than
the equatorial regions. The Coriolis force associated with these zonal flows
perpetually "pumps" the convection zone fluid, and maintains a quasi-steady
circulation, poleward near the surface. What is the influence of this
meridional circulation on the underlying radiative zone, and in particular,
does it provide a significant source of mixing between the two regions? In
Paper I, we began to study this question by assuming a fixed meridional flow
pattern in the convection zone and calculating its penetration depth into the
radiative zone. We found that the amount of mixing caused depends very
sensitively on the assumed flow structure near the radiative--convective
interface. We continue this study here by including a simple model for the
convection zone "pump", and calculating in a self-consistent manner the
meridional flows generated in the whole Sun. We find that the global
circulation timescale depends in a crucial way on two factors: the overall
stratification of the radiative zone as measured by the Rossby number times the
square root of the Prandtl number, and, for weakly stratified systems, the
presence or absence of stresses within the radiative zone capable of breaking
the Taylor-Proudman constraint. We conclude by discussing the consequences of
our findings for the solar interior and argue that a potentially important
mechanism for mixing in Main Sequence stars has so far been neglected.Comment: 42 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to Ap
Double-diffusive erosion of the core of Jupiter
We present Direct Numerical Simulations of the transport of heat and heavy
elements across a double-diffusive interface or a double-diffusive staircase,
in conditions that are close to those one may expect to find near the boundary
between the heavy-element rich core and the hydrogen-helium envelope of giant
planets such as Jupiter. We find that the non-dimensional ratio of the buoyancy
flux associated with heavy element transport to the buoyancy flux associated
with heat transport lies roughly between 0.5 and 1, which is much larger than
previous estimates derived by analogy with geophysical double-diffusive
convection. Using these results in combination with a core-erosion model
proposed by Guillot et al. (2004), we find that the entire core of Jupiter
would be eroded within less than 1Myr assuming that the core-envelope boundary
is composed of a single interface. We also propose an alternative model that is
more appropriate in the presence of a well-established double-diffusive
staircase, and find that in this limit a large fraction of the core could be
preserved. These findings are interesting in the context of Juno's recent
results, but call for further modeling efforts to better understand the process
of core erosion from first principles.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamics of fingering convection I: Small-scale fluxes and large-scale instabilities
Double-diffusive instabilities are often invoked to explain enhanced
transport in stably-stratified fluids. The most-studied natural manifestation
of this process, fingering convection, commonly occurs in the ocean's
thermocline and typically increases diapycnal mixing by two orders of magnitude
over molecular diffusion. Fingering convection is also often associated with
structures on much larger scales, such as thermohaline intrusions, gravity
waves and thermohaline staircases. In this paper, we present an exhaustive
study of the phenomenon from small to large scales. We perform the first
three-dimensional simulations of the process at realistic values of the heat
and salt diffusivities and provide accurate estimates of the induced turbulent
transport. Our results are consistent with oceanic field measurements of
diapycnal mixing in fingering regions. We then develop a generalized mean-field
theory to study the stability of fingering systems to large-scale
perturbations, using our calculated turbulent fluxes to parameterize
small-scale transport. The theory recovers the intrusive instability, the
collective instability, and the gamma-instability as limiting cases. We find
that the fastest-growing large-scale mode depends sensitively on the ratio of
the background gradients of temperature and salinity (the density ratio). While
only intrusive modes exist at high density ratios, the collective and
gamma-instabilities dominate the system at the low density ratios where
staircases are typically observed. We conclude by discussing our findings in
the context of staircase formation theory.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, submitted to JF
Turbulent transport by diffusive stratified shear flows: from local to global models. Part II: Limitations of local models
This paper continues the systematic investigation of diffusive shear
instabilities initiated in Part I of this series. In this work, we primarily
focus on quantifying the impact of non-local mixing, which is not taken into
account in Zahn's mixing model \citep{Zahn92}. We present the results of direct
numerical simulations in a new model setup designed to contain coexisting
laminar and turbulent shear layers. As in Part I, we use the Low P\'eclet
Number approximation of \citet{Lign1999} to model the evolution of the
perturbations. Our main findings are twofold. First, turbulence is not
necessarily generated whenever Zahn's nonlinear criterion \citep{Zahn1974}
is satisfied, where is the local
gradient Richardson number, is the Prandtl number,
and . We have demonstrated that the presence or
absence of turbulent mixing in this limit hysteretically depends on the history
of the shear layer. Second, Zahn's nonlinear instability criterion only
approximately locates the edge of the turbulent layer, and mixing beyond the
region where can also take place in a manner
analogous to convective overshoot. We found that the turbulent kinetic energy
decays roughly exponentially beyond the edge of the shear-unstable region, on a
lengthscale that is directly proportional to the scale of the
turbulent eddies, which are themselves of the order of the Zahn scale (see Part
I). Our results suggest that mixing by diffusive shear instabilities should be
modeled with more care than is currently standard in stellar evolution codes.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Dynamics of the solar tachocline I: an incompressible study
Gough & McIntyre have suggested that the dynamics of the solar tachocline are
dominated by the advection-diffusion balance between the differential rotation,
a large-scale primordial field and baroclinicly driven meridional motions. This
paper presents the first part of a study of the tachocline, in which a model of
the rotation profile below the convection zone is constructed along the lines
suggested by Gough & McIntyre and solved numerically. In this first part, a
reduced model of the tachocline is derived in which the effects of
compressibility and energy transport on the system are neglected; the
meridional motions are driven instead by Ekman-Hartmann pumping. It is shown
that there exists only a narrow range of magnetic field strengths for which the
system can achieve a nearly uniform rotation. The results are discussed with
respect to observations and to the limitations of this initial approach. A
following paper combines the effects of realistic baroclinic driving and
stratification with a model that follows closely the lines of work of Gough &
McIntyre.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, accepted by MNRA
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