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Lecture 8 Double-diffusive convection

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1 Lecture 8 Double-diffusive convection
Discovered in oceanographic context Nowadays many applications Here: two diffusivities Thermal diffusivity acts destabilizing In astrophysics: semiconvection

2 Different diffusivities crucial
kS=1.3 x 10-5 cm2 s-1 (sea water) kC=1.5 x 10-3 cm2 s-1 Le = kT/kC= Sc/Pr=Schmidt/Prandtl is large temperature in equilibrium, salinity not Diffusion can destabilize the system! not with single diffusing component

3 Two active scalars C for concentration of salinity Opposing trends:
avoid S, which we used for entropy both aT>0 and aC>0 Opposing trends: if T increases, r decreases if C increases, r increases  Rayleigh-Benard-like problem

4 Origin in oceanography
Stommel et al (1954) Stern (1960)

5 Case 1: more salt on top dT/dz>0 dC/dz>0 dr/dz<0 hot salty
displacement hot salty blob lighter than surroundings blob heavier than surroundings fresh cold unstable stable unstable (top-heavy) but density stably stratified

6 Case 2: salt stabilizes unstable dT/dz
dC/dz<0 dr/dz<0 displacement cold fresh blob heavier than surroundings blob lighter than surroundings salty hot “overstable” unstable Stable Stabilizing! again density stably stratified

7 Overstability? Originated from stellar stability   Hopf bifurcation
(Gough 2003)  Hopf bifurcation

8 Boussinesq equations

9 Recall lecture 3, eq.(10) and (11)
linearized, & double-curl Proceed analogously where

10 Reduce to single equation
apply to both sides of and use on rhs

11 ….to obtain Do simplest case: stress-free boundaries
assume that principle of exchange of stabilities applicable

12 …works only for nonoscillatory onset
But we see that that instability is possible if remember: Either negative T gradient big enough (i.e. 1st term dominant):  similar to Rayleigh-Benard convection but could be stabilized by negative C gradient or C gradient is positive and big enough (2nd term dominant): salt fingers

13 Dispersion relation substitute  Cubic equation Solve numerically
Buoyancy frequencies  Cubic equation Solve numerically Onset, nonoscillatory (zero frequency) also: decaying, oscillatory modes (pair of finite frequencies)

14 Salt fingers

15 Dispersion relation: opposite case
growing oscillatory modes (again pair of frequencies)

16 The two regimes

17 Staircase formation

18 Staircase formation Empirical fact, not from linear theory (nor weakly
nonlinear theory)

19 Many applications! Oceanography Geology (magma chambers) Astrophysics
Publications in double-diffusive Oceanography Geology (magma chambers) Astrophysics Engineering (metallurgy) Yet, not very highly thought of back in the 1950s

20 Astrophysical application: m-gradient
Kato (1966)

21 In astrophysics: semi-convection
 Lots of current research! Layered convection (Zaussinger & Spruit 2013)

22 Backup slides

23 x

24 x

25 x

26 x

27 x

28 “Salt fingers” in magma chamber

29 Comparison: the 2 regimes

30 Overstability?


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