Abstract
This paper presents a numerical study of the dynamics and stability
of two-dimensional
thermal plumes in a significantly stratified layer. Motivated by stellar
envelope convection in which radiative cooling at the star's photosphere
drives
vigorous down flows, we examine cool plumes descending through an adiabatically
stratified
layer of increasing density with depth. Such flows are inaccessible by
laboratory experiments,
yet are important to the understanding of heat and momentum transport,
magnetic field generation, and acoustic excitation in stars like the Sun.
We find that
the structure of thermal plumes in a stratified compressible medium is
significantly
different from that in an incompressible one, with pressure perturbations
playing
an important dynamical role. Additionally, we find that the plumes are
subject to
vigorous secondary instabilities even in a quiescent background medium.
While the
flows studied are not fully turbulent but transitional, the nature of the
compressive
instabilities and their influence on subsequent flow evolution suggests
that advective
detrainment of fluid from the plume region results. Simplified plume models
assuming
a hydrostatic pressure distribution and velocity-proportional entrainment
may thus
be inappropriate in this context.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
45 articles.
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