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Influence of heating mode on three-dimensional mantle convectionNumerical models of three-dimensional thermal convection in highly viscous spherical shells with different combinations of internal and basal heating consistently have upwelling concentrations in the form of cylindrical plumes and downwelling in planar sheets. As the proportion of internal heating increases, the number of upwelling plumes increases, and downwelling sheets become more vigorous and time-dependent. With any amount of basal heating, the entire convective pattern, during its evolution, is anchored to the upwelling plumes. As the proportion of internal heating increases, the heat flow carried by the upwelling plumes remains a large fraction of the basal heat flow. Downwelling sheets carry only a minor fraction (approximately 30 percent) of the basal heat flow (even when the shell is entirely heated from below), but they advect almost all of the internally generated heat. The relatively large number of plumes in the earth's mantle (inferred from hotspots), the possibility that downwelling slabs are vigorous enough to penetrate the lower mantle, and the small fraction of terrestrial surface heat flow carried by plumes all suggest that the mantle is predominantly heated from within.
Document ID
19890060011
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Bercovici, D.
(California Univ. Los Angeles, CA, United States)
Schubert, G.
(California, University Los Angeles, United States)
Glatzmaier, G. A.
(Los Alamos National Laboratory NM, United States)
Date Acquired
August 14, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1989
Publication Information
Publication: Geophysical Research Letters
Volume: 16
ISSN: 0094-8276
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
89A47382
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-152
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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