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Direct numerical simulations are employed to reveal three distinctly different flow regions in rotating spherical Rayleigh-Benard convection. In the low-latitude region $mathrm{I}$ vertical (parallel to the axis of rotation) convective columns are generated between the hot inner and the cold outer sphere. The mid-latitude region $mathrm{II}$ is dominated by vertically aligned convective columns formed between the Northern and Southern hemispheres of the outer sphere. The diffusion-free scaling, which indicates bulk-dominated convection, originates from this mid-latitude region. In the equator region $mathrm{III}$ the vortices are affected by the outer spherical boundary and are much shorter than in region $mathrm{II}$. Thermally driven turbulence with background rotation in spherical Rayleigh-Benard convection is found to be characterized by three distinctly different flow regions. The diffusion-free scaling, which indicates the heat transfer is bulk-dominated, originates from the mid-latitude region in which vertically aligned vortices are stretched between the Northern and Southern hemispheres of the outer sphere. These results show that the flow physics in rotating convection are qualitatively different in planar and spherical geometries. This finding underlines that it is crucial to study convection in spherical geometries to better understand geophysical and astrophysical flow phenomena.
We study numerically the melting of a horizontal layer of a pure solid above a convecting layer of its fluid rotating about the vertical axis. In the rotating regime studied here, with Rayleigh numbers of order $10^7$, convection takes the form of co
The effect of rotation on the boundary layers (BLs) in a Rayleigh-Benard (RB) system at a relatively low Rayleigh number, i.e. $Ra = 4times10^7$, is studied for different Pr by direct numerical simulations and the results are compared with laminar BL
For rapidly rotating turbulent Rayleigh--Benard convection in a slender cylindrical cell, experiments and direct numerical simulations reveal a boundary zonal flow (BZF) that replaces the classical large-scale circulation. The BZF is located near the
Using direct numerical simulations, we study rotating Rayleigh-Benard convection in a cylindrical cell for a broad range of Rayleigh, Ekman, and Prandtl numbers from the onset of wall modes to the geostrophic regime, an extremely important one in geo
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