Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4679619 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Numerical simulations of thermo-chemical, multi-phase, compressible mantle convection in a three-dimensional spherical shell are used to investigate the relationship between lateral variations in seismic shear-wave velocity Vs above the core–mantle boundary (CMB) and lateral variations in heat flux across the CMB (qCMB), when compositional variations and the post-perovskite phase transition are included. For simple thermal convection, the Vs–qCMB relationship is reasonably but not perfectly linear. The post-perovskite transition introduces a non-linearity that amplifies fast Vs anomalies in cold regions, but there is still a unique mapping between δVs and qCMB. Lateral variations in composition such as piles of dense material introduce another non-linearity that affects hot upwelling regions, and introduces a non-uniqueness in δVs–qCMB if the dense material (e.g., MORB) is seismically fast compared to the surrounding material. In this case, dense piles are ringed by sharp, low-Vs anomalies. If the CMB is covered by a global dense layer than variations in δVs and qCMB are reduced but so is the mean value of qCMB. In all cases, the peak-to-peak lateral variation in qCMB is similar to or larger than twice the mean value, which might create problems for generating a dynamo according to existing numerical dynamo simulations. Analytical scalings are developed to explain the observed trends.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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