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The wind in confined thermal convection
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2001
Year
MeteorologyEngineeringAerospace EngineeringSolar ConvectionFluid MechanicsLarge-scale Circulation VelocityTurbulence ModelingTurbulent Flow Heat TransferAspect Ratio UnityAerodynamicsVortex DynamicThermodynamicsNatural ConvectionHeat TransferConfined Thermal ConvectionThermal EngineeringConvective Heat TransferWind Velocity
A large-scale circulation velocity, often called the ‘wind’, has been observed in turbulent convection in the Rayleigh–Bénard apparatus, which is a closed box with a heated bottom wall. The wind survives even when the dynamical parameter, namely the Rayleigh number, is very large. Over a wide range of time scales greater than its characteristic turnover time, the wind velocity exhibits occasional and irregular reversals without a change in magnitude. We study this feature experimentally in an apparatus of aspect ratio unity, in which the highest attainable Rayleigh number is about 10 16 . A possible physical explanation is attempted.