Abstract

Context.Quantifying tidal interactions in close-in two-body systems is of prime interest since they have a crucial impact on the architecture and the rotational history of the bodies. Various studies have shown that the dissipation of tides in either body is very sensitive to its structure and to its dynamics. Furthermore, solar-like stars and giant gaseous planets in our Solar System experience differential rotation in their outer convective envelopes. In this respect, numerical simulations of tidal interactions in these objects have shown that the propagation and dissipation properties of tidally excited inertial waves can be strongly modified in the presence of differential rotation.Aims.In particular, tidal inertial waves may strongly interact with zonal flows at the so-called co-rotation resonances, where the wave’s Doppler-shifted frequency is cancelled out. The energy dissipation at such resonances could deeply modify the orbital and spin evolutions of tidally interacting systems. In this context, we aim to provide a deep physical understanding of the dynamics of tidal waves at co-rotation resonances in the presence of differential rotation profiles that are typical of low-mass stars and giant planets.Methods.In this work, we have developed an analytical local model of an inclined shearing box that describes a small patch of the differentially rotating convective zone of a star or a planet. We investigate the propagation and the transmission of free inertial waves at co-rotation, and more generally at critical levels, which are singularities in the governing wave differential equation. Through the construction of an invariant called the wave action flux, we identify different regimes of wave transmission at critical levels, which are confirmed with a one-dimensional three-layer numerical model.Results.We find that inertial waves can be fully transmitted, strongly damped, or even amplified after crossing a critical level. The occurrence of these regimes depends on the assumed profile of differential rotation, on the nature as well as the latitude of the critical level, and on wave parameters such as the inertial frequency and the longitudinal and vertical wavenumbers. Waves can thus either deposit their action flux in the fluid when damped at critical levels, or they can extract action flux from the fluid when amplified at critical levels. Both situations can lead to significant angular momentum exchange between the tidally interacting bodies.

Highlights

  • Tidal interactions are known to drive the late evolution of short-period planetary systems, such as hot Jupiters orbiting around their host star and, in our Solar System, the satellites around Jupiter and Saturn (e.g. Ogilvie 2014; Mathis 2019)

  • Inertial waves at critical levels when the box is tilted we analytically investigate waves passing through the various critical levels in the tilted box

  • The present study was motivated by the works of Baruteau & Rieutord (2013) and Guenel et al (2016a,b), who showed that differential rotation can strongly affect the propagation and dissipation properties of linear inertial waves

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Summary

Introduction

Tidal interactions are known to drive the late evolution of short-period planetary systems, such as hot Jupiters orbiting around their host star and, in our Solar System, the satellites around Jupiter and Saturn (e.g. Ogilvie 2014; Mathis 2019). The study of the impact of differential rotation on the propagation and dissipation properties of inertial modes of oscillation began with the work of Baruteau & Rieutord (2013) They examined the impact of either a shellular (radial) or a cylindrical rotation profile on free inertial waves in an incompressible background by means of a Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin-Jeffreys (WKBJ) linear analysis for an inviscid fluid and by solving the linearised hydrodynamics equations for a viscous fluid via a spectral code. 3, we establish a second-order ordinary differential equation (ODE) for the latitudinal perturbed velocity, and we derive the propagation properties of inertial waves for an inviscid fluid This ODE is solved near each critical level for both conical and cylindrical rotation profiles, and we interpret energy flux exchanges between the waves and the mean flow.

Local Cartesian model including differential rotation
System of equations
Equilibrium state of the background flow
Dynamics of inertial waves at critical levels: analytical predictions
Propagation properties
Phase and group velocity at singularities
Conservation of the wave action flux
Inertial wave crossing co-rotation
Inertial waves when the box is at the poles
Analytical solutions with constant shear
Frobenius method at the pole
Numerical exploration at constant shear when the box is inclined
Cylindrical differential rotation in Jupiter and Saturn
Total absorption
Conclusion and perspectives
Full Text
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