Modes of Mantle Convection, Their Stability, and What Controls Their Existence

Author:

Al Asad Manar12ORCID,Lau Harriet C. P.12ORCID,Crowley John W.34ORCID,Lenardic Adrian5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences Brown University Providence RI USA

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Science University of California Berkeley Berkeley CA USA

3. Canadian Geodetic Survey Natural Resources Canada Ottawa ON Canada

4. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Ottawa Ottawa ON Canada

5. Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences Rice University Houston TX USA

Abstract

AbstractThe motion of Earth's tectonic plates is the surface expression of mantle convection beneath. Analytical convection models have attempted to relate observables, such as plate velocities and surface heat flow, with the thermo‐mechanical state of the mantle, and remain deeply influential in global geophysics. While such models tend to focus on describing the mantle's behavior today, there is evidence that suggests they may not be the best description for an earlier, hotter mantle. Early in Earth's history, higher temperatures may have led to different convective regimes that include active‐lid (today's form of convection), sluggish‐lid, and stagnant‐lid convection. In this study, we adopt and extend the analytical theory laid out by Crowley & O'Connell (2012, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2011.05254.x) that self‐consistently characterizes the first two of these convection regimes. For a given thermo‐mechanical state, the theory predicts one to multiple solutions that each represent distinct modes of mantle convection. Here, we derive new scaling laws that connect these modes to the mantle's Rayleigh number and identify a new fundamental, dimensionless number, which we term the O’Connell number (named after Richard “Rick” J. O'Connell (1941–2015)), that describes a plate's resistance in context of the overall convection of the system. In addition, we identify two key bifurcations that bracket the Rayleigh‐O'Connell number space within which multiple solutions may exist. Finally, we remove the assumption of steady‐state in their original framework in order to perform a linear stability analysis to characterize the relative stability of each convection mode.

Funder

David and Lucile Packard Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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