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Onset of wall-attached convection in a rotating fluid layer in the presence of a vertical magnetic field

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2008

J. J. SÁNCHEZ-ÁLVAREZ
Affiliation:
ETSI Aeronáuticos, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain
E. CRESPO DEL ARCO
Affiliation:
UNED, Departamento de Física Fundamental, Apdo. 60.141, 28080 Madrid, Spain
F. H. BUSSE
Affiliation:
Institute of Physics, University of Bayreuth, D-95440 Bayreuth, Germany

Abstract

A horizontal fluid layer heated from below and rotating about a vertical axis in the presence of a vertical magnetic field is considered. From earlier work it is known that the onset of convection in a rotating layer usually occurs in the form of travelling waves attached to the vertical sidewalls of the layer. It is found that this behaviour persists when a vertical magnetic field is applied. When the Elsasser number Λ is kept constant and the sidewall is thermally insulating the critical Rayleigh number Rc increases in proportion to the rotation rate described by the square root of the Taylor number, τ. This asymptotic relationship is found for an electrically highly conducting sidewall as well as for an electrically insulating one. At fixed rotation rate for Q≫τ, Rc grows in proportion to Q when the sidewall is electrically highly conducting, and in proportion to Q3/4 when the sidewall is electrically insulating. Here Q is the Chandrasekhar number which is a measure of the magnetic energy density, and a thermally insulating sidewall has been assumed. Of particular interest is the possibility that the magnetic field counteracts the stabilizing influence of rotation on the onset of sidewall convection in the case of thermally insulating sidewalls. When the sidewall is thermally highly conducting, Rc for the sidewall mode grows in proportion to τ4/3. This asymptotic behaviour is found for both cases of electrical boundary conditions, but it no longer precedes the onset of bulk convection for Λ ≳ 1.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

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References

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