arXiv:1302.5283 [physics.flu-dyn]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
A Laboratory-Scale Experiment and a Numerical Simulation of Unusual Spiral Plumes in a High-Prandtl-number Fluid
A. N. Sharifulin, V. A. Bezprozvannikh, A. N. Poludnitsin
Published 2013-02-21, updated 2014-10-03Version 5
We experimentally and numerically investigated the generation of plumes from a local heat source (LHS) and studied the interaction of these plumes with cellular convective motion (CCM) in a rectangular cavity filled with silicon oil at a Prandtl number (Pr) of approximately two thousand. The LHS is generated using a 0.2-W green laser beam. A roll-type CCM is generated by vertically heating one side of the cavity. The CCM may lead to the formation of an unusual spiral convective plume that resembles a vertical Archimedes spiral. A similar plume is obtained in a direct numerical simulation. We discuss the physical mechanism for the formation of a spiral plume and the application of the results to mantle convection problems. We also estimate the Reynolds (Re) and Rayleigh (Ra) numbers and apply self-similarity theory to convection in the Earth's mantle. Spiral plumes can be used to interpret mantle tomography results over the last decade.