Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4741990 Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Deformed by tidal forces, the cavity of a planetary fluid core may be in the shape of a biaxial ellipsoid x2/a2+y2/b2+z2/a2=1x2/a2+y2/b2+z2/a2=1, where a and b are two different semi-axes and z   is in the direction of rotation. Gravitational interaction between a planet and its parent star exerts an axial torque on the planet and forces its longitudinal libration, a periodic variation of its angular velocity around its rotating axis. Longitudinal libration drives fluid motion in the planetary core via both viscous and topographic coupling between the mantle and fluid. For an arbitrary size of the equatorial eccentricity E=a2-b2/a, direct numerical simulation of the fully nonlinear problem is carried out using an EBE (Element-By-Element) finite element method. It is shown that fluid motion driven by longitudinal libration vacillates between two different phases: a prograde phase when the planet’s rotation speeds up and a retrograde phase when it slows down. For weak longitudinal libration, the fluid motion is laminar without exhibiting noticeable differences between the two phases and a multi-layered, time-independent, nearly geostrophic mean flow can be generated and maintained by longitudinal libration in a biaxial or triaxial ellipsoidal cavity. For strong slow libration, there are profound differences between the two different phases: the retrograde phase is usually marked by fluid motion with instabilities and complex spatial structure while in the prograde phase the flow is still largely laminar.

► Many planets are in ellipsoidal shape and undergo Longitudinal Libration (LL). ► Direct numerical simulation studies the fluid motion in planetary cores driven by LL. ► A variety of flows and instabilities are revealed by direct simulation. ► The retrograde phase is marked by instabilities with complex spatial flow structure. ► In the prograde phase the flow is still largely laminar.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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