During the first 30 months of the ERC project THEIA (01/09/2020 - 28/02/2023), significant progress has been made for the three work packages (WP) of the project (as detailed in the DoA), and 8 articles have been published in top-ranked international journals. In particular:
• WP1 (topography driven flows): we have obtained the mean zonal core flows due to orbital forcings (precession, tides, etc.) in deformed spherical shells (Cébron et al., J. Fluid Mech. 2021). Using a new mathematical formulation, the eigenmodes of a tidally-deformed planetary core have also been obtained, including density and pressure variations (Vidal & Cébron, Proc. R. Soc. A, 2020). Extending this new method, we have proposed a new approach to unlock the simulations of core turbulence due to orbital forcings in non-spherical geometries (which were hampered by viscous layers, see Vidal & Cébron, J. Fluid Mech. 2023).
• WP2 (interaction with buoyancy): we are currently developing a large-scale experiment, as well as a prior smaller-scale one to investigate the interactions between topography, rotation and buoyancy in the turbulent regime (which cannot be tackled with theory or numerics). Simultaneously, combining symbolic and arbitrary precision numeric computations, the PhD student R. Monville has developed from scratch an innovative code to provide accurate estimates of the topography driven stress generated by core (or laboratory experiment) flows on a rigid domain (e.g. an electrically conducting lowermost layer of the mantle), including the effects of rotation, buoyancy, viscosity and magnetic fields (Monville et al., in prep). Such a code will allow us to bridge the gap between laboratory experiments, oceanic or atmospheric studies, and planetary liquid cores.
• WP3 (Magnetic field effects): we have obtained and validated the first (kinematic) dynamo magnetic fields in tidally-deformed spheres (Vidal & Cébron, Proc. R. Soc. A 2021), that is for large-scale departure from the spherical geometry. While the Early Moon paleofield data motivates our study of precession driven dynamos, we have shown that the most relevant forcing for the Early Earth paleodynamo is actually the tidal one (Landeau et al., Nat Rev Earth Environ 2023), motivating our on-going dedicated study.
These models and results have been communicated in various international conferences (e.g. IAGA 2021, SEDI 2022, AGU 2022, etc.).