Abstract
To understand how a spherical geometry influences the dynamics of gravity-driven subduction of the oceanic lithosphere on Earth, we study a simple model of a thin and dense axisymmetric shell of thickness
$h$
and viscosity
$\eta _1$
sinking in a spherical body of fluid with radius
$R_0$
and a lower viscosity
$\eta _0$
. Using scaling analysis based on thin viscous shell theory, we identify a fundamental length scale, the ‘bending length’
$l_b$
, and two key dimensionless parameters that control the dynamics: the ‘flexural stiffness’
$St = (\eta _1/\eta _0)(h/l_b)^3$
and the ‘sphericity number’
$\varSigma = (l_b/R_0)\cot \theta _t$
, where
$\theta _t$
is the angular radius of the subduction trench. To validate the scaling analysis, we obtain a suite of instantaneous numerical solutions using a boundary-element method based on new analytical point-force Green functions that satisfy free-slip boundary conditions on the sphere's surface. To isolate the effect of sphericity, we calculate the radial sinking speed
$V$
and the hoop stress resultant
$T_2$
at the leading end of the subducted part of the shell, both normalised by their ‘flat-Earth’ values (i.e. for
$\varSigma = 0$
). For reasonable terrestrial values of
$\eta _1/\eta _0$
(
$\approx$
several hundred), sphericity has a modest effect on
$V$
, which is reduced by
$< 7\,\%$
for large plates such as the Pacific plate and by up to 34 % for smaller plates such as the Cocos and Philippine Sea plates. However, sphericity has a much greater effect on
$T_2$
, increasing it by up to 64 % for large plates and 240 % for small plates. This result has important implications for the growth of longitudinal buckling instabilities in subducting spherical shells.
Funder
Programme National de Planetologie, INSU/CNES
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
6 articles.
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