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91̽»¨
Juno Jupiter image

Dr Shanshan Ding

PDRA

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics
shanshan.ding@physics.ox.ac.uk
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 209E
  • About
  • Publications

Emergence of Robust Zonal Jets in a Differentially Heated Rotating Annulus

Copernicus Publications (2026)

Authors:

Shanshan Ding, Peter Read

Abstract:

The midlatitude atmospheres of gas giant planets are characteristic of strong and persistent zonal jets; however, the processes governing their formation and the associated energy pathways remain less understood. To investigate these mechanisms, we conducted a laboratory study of zonal jets driven by thermal forcing in an annular cylindrical tank partially filled with distilled water as the working fluid. Heating is applied at the outer boundary, cooling at the inner boundary, the bottom is thermally insulated, and the top is a free surface. An array of laser diodes embedded in the inner cylinder generates an annular laser sheet, enabling the measurement of velocity fields at a fixed height using particle image velocimetry. By systematically varying the rotation rate and the imposed temperature contrast, we adjusted the steepness of the free surface, thus the topographic β effect, and the thermal forcing strength, respectively. The non-dimensional controlling parameter, thermal Rossby number, RoT, ranges from 0.0012 to 0.01 and Taylor number, Ta, from 2.3 × 1010 to1.7 × 1011. We discerned the emergence of robust zonal jets, of which the zonal-mean kinetic energy accounts for up to 70% of the total kinetic energy, corresponding to a zonostrophic index of 2.7. In this regime, two coherent and persistent prograde jets form near the inner and outer boundaries. The radial profile of the potential vorticity develops toward a pronounced staircase-like structure, consistent with previous numerical studies (Scott and Dritschel, J. Fluid Mech., 2012). Analysis of the inter-scale energy transfer reveals a dominant interaction between the zonal-mean flow and eddies, while the kinetic energy spectrum of the zonal-mean component exhibits k−5 (where k denotes the wavenumber), in agreement with the theory of zonostrophic turbulence (Sukoriansky and Galperin, PRL, 2002).                                     Figure 1: A snapshot of azimuthal velocity contour for RoT = 7.1 × 10−3, Ta = 1.44 × 1011 and β =49.7 m−1 s−1.

Stratification-dependent enstrophy-controlled regime in geostrophic turbulence

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) (2026)

Authors:

Shanshan DING, Hadrien Bobas, Hélène Scolan, Roland Young, Peter READ

Experimental dataset of sandwiched baroclinic flows over a bottom conical plate

91̽»¨ (2025)

Abstract:

This dataset comprises time-resolved, two-component horizontal velocity fields from experiments in a rotating, differentially heated fluid annulus. The experiments were conducted at the GFDLab, 91̽»¨.

Predicting internal boundary layer growth following a roughness change in thermally neutral and stable boundary layers

Journal of Fluid Mechanics Cambridge University Press 1016 (2025) R4

Authors:

Shan-Shan Ding, Matteo Carpentieri, Alan Robins, Marco Placidi

Characterising turbulent cascades and zonal jet formation processes from observations of cloud level winds on Jupiter and Saturn

Copernicus Publications (2025)

Authors:

Peter L Read, Arrate Antunano, Hadrien Bobas, Greg Colyer, Shanshan Ding, Teresa del Río Gaztelurrutia, Agustin Sanchez-Lavega, Roland Young

Abstract:

Recent analyses of wind measurements obtained from tracking cloud motions in spacecraft images of Jupiter and Saturn[1,2] indicate that nonlinear scale-to-scale transfers of kinetic energy act from small to large scales over a wide range of length scales, much as anticipated for 2D or geostrophic turbulence paradigms. At the smallest resolvable scales, however, there is evidence in observations of a forward (downscale) transfer, at least at low and middle latitudes on Jupiter, much like in the Earth’s atmosphere. Moreover, the upscale transfers at the largest spatial scales are evidently dominated by spectrally non-local, highly anisotropic eddy-zonal interactions associated with the generation of intense zonal jets and equatorial super-rotation by direct eddy-zonal flow exchanges. Most analyses to date have emphasised the global mean interactions for both planets, thereby focusing on the spatially homogeneous and isotropic components of the turbulence. Here we present some new analyses of spectral energy transfers on both Jupiter and Saturn that resolve variations in latitude[cf 3], thereby shedding new light on non-homogeneous aspects of jovian turbulent interactions. The results indicate significant variability and inhomogeneity between different locations, with a clear distinction between the tropics, the extratropical middle latitudes and the polar regions. We discuss these in light of other observations and models of gas giant circulation and related laboratory experimental analogues.[1] Antu˜nano, A., del Río-Gaztelurrutia, T., Sánchez-Lavega, A., & Hueso, R. (2015) Dynamics of Saturn’s polar regions. J. Geophys. Res.: Planets, 120 , 155–176. doi:10.1002/2014JE004709[2] Read, P. L., Antu˜nano, A., Cabanes, S., Colyer, G., del Río-Gaztelurrutia, T., Sánchez-Lavega, A. (2022). Energy exchanges in Saturn’s polar regions fromCassini observations: Eddy-zonal flow interactions. J. Geophys. Res., 127 , e2021JE006973. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JE006973[3] Chemke, R., & Kaspi, Y. (2015). The latitudinal dependence of atmospheric jet scales and macroturbulent energy cascades. J. Atmos. Sci., 72 , 3891–3907. doi: 10.1175/JAS-D-15-0007.

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