Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 April 1998
Investigation of the linear stability problem for rapidly rotating convection on an f-plane has revealed the existence of two distinct scales in the vertical structure of the critical eigenfunctions: a small length scale whose vertical wavenumber kz is comparable with the large horizontal wavenumber k⊥ selected at onset, and a large-scale modulation which forms an envelope on the order of the layer depth d. The small-scale structure in the vertical results from a geostrophic balance imposed by the Taylor–Proudman constraint. This primary balance forces rotational alignment and confines fluid motions to planes perpendicular to the rotation axis. For convective transport in the vertical this constraint must be relaxed. This is achieved by molecular dissipation which allows weak upward (downward) spiralling of hot (cold) fluid elements across the Taylor–Proudman planes and results in a large-scale vertical modulation of the Taylor columns.
In the limit of fast rotation (i.e. large Taylor number) a multiple-scales analysis leads to the determination of a critical Rayleigh number as a function of wavenumber, roll orientation and the tilt angle of the f-plane. The corresponding critical eigenfunction represents the core solution; matching to passive Ekman boundary layers is required for a complete solution satisfying boundary conditions.
An extension of this analysis, introduced by Bassom & Zhang (1994), is used to describe strongly nonlinear two-dimensional convection, characterized by significant departures of the mean thermal field from its conduction profile. The analysis requires the solution of a nonlinear eigenvalue problem for the Nusselt number (for steady convection) and the Nusselt number and oscillation frequency (for the overstable problem). The solutions of this problem are used to calculate horizontal and vertical heat fluxes, as well as Reynolds stresses, as functions of both the latitude and roll orientation in the horizontal, and these are used to calculate self-consistently north–south and east–west mean flows. These analytical predictions are in good agreement with the results of three-dimensional simulations reported by Hathaway & Somerville (1983).