The electromagnetically driven anticyclonic flow in the wide gap of a rotating concentric spheres system is studied experimentally and numerically in the laminar regime. The working fluid is an electrolyte contained in the spherical gap. The outer sphere rotates at constant angular speed, and the inner sphere is at rest. The electromagnetic stirring is generated due to the interaction of a direct current, which is injected radially through ring-shaped electrodes located at the equatorial zone of each sphere, and a dipolar magnetic field produced by a permanent magnet located inside the inner sphere. Experimental velocity fields in the equatorial plane were obtained with particle image velocimetry. Additionally, full three-dimensional numerical simulations were performed. The high shearing at the equatorial region promotes an instability that can be perceived as a triggering mechanism of four tornado-like vortical structures tilted and entangled in the polar direction. The instability structure rotates in either the cyclonic or the anticyclonic direction, depending on the flow parameters, namely, the angular velocity of the outer sphere and the applied electric current. To the best knowledge of the authors, this is the first time the phenomenon under study is reported with electromagnetic forcing. The numerical results agree quantitatively with the experimental observations.
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