The Equatorial Ekman Layer
Abstract
The steady incompressible viscous flow in the wide gap between spheres rotating about a common axis at slightly different rates (small Ekman number E) has a long and celebrated history. The problem is relevant to the dynamics of geophysical and planetary core flows, for which, in the case of electrically conducting fluids, the possible operation of a dynamo is of considerable interest. A comprehensive asymptotic study, in the limit E<<1, was undertaken by Stewartson (J. Fluid Mech. 1966, vol. 26, pp. 131-144). The mainstream flow, exterior to the E1/2 Ekman layers on the inner/outer boundaries and the shear layer on the inner sphere tangent cylinder C, is geostrophic. Stewartson identified a complicated nested layer structure on C, which comprises relatively thick quasi-geostrophic E2/7 (inside C) and E1/4 (outside C) layers. They embed a thinner E1/3 ageostrophic shear layer (on C), which merges with the inner sphere Ekman layer to form the E2/5 Equatorial Ekman layer of axial length E1/5. Under appropriate scaling, this E2/5--layer problem may be formulated, correct to leading order, independent of E. Accordingly, the Ekman boundary layer and ageostrophic shear layer become features of the far-field (as identified by the large value of the scaled axial co-ordinate z) solution. We present a numerical solution, which uses a non-local integral boundary condition at finite z to account for the far-field behaviour. Adopting z-1 as a small parameter we extend Stewartson's similarity solution for the ageostrophic shear layer to higher orders. This far-field solution agrees well with that obtained from our numerical model.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.