Laboratory Exploration of Heat Transfer Regimes in Rapidly Rotating Turbulent Convection (1911.04537v4)
Abstract: We report heat transfer and temperature profile measurements in laboratory experiments of rapidly rotating convection in water under intense thermal forcing (Rayleigh number $Ra$ as high as $\sim 10{13}$) and unprecedentedly strong rotational influence (Ekman numbers $E$ as low as $10{-8}$). Measurements of the mid-height vertical temperature gradient connect quantitatively to predictions from numerical models of asymptotically rapidly rotating convection, separating various flow phenomenologies. Past the limit of validity of the asymptotically-reduced models, we find novel behaviors in a regime we refer to as rotationally-influenced turbulence, where rotation is important but not as dominant as in the known geostrophic turbulence regime. The temperature gradients collapse to a Rayleigh-number scaling as $Ra{-0.2}$ in this new regime. It is bounded from above by a critical convective Rossby number $Ro*=0.06$ independent of domain aspect ratio $\Gamma$, clearly distinguishing it from well-studied rotation-affected convection.