The heat transport by rapidly rotating Rayleigh-Bénard convection is of fundamental importance to many geophysical flows. Laboratory measurements are impeded by robust wall modes that develop along vertical walls, significantly perturbing the heat flux. We show that narrow horizontal fins along the vertical walls efficiently suppress wall modes ensuring that their contribution to the global heat flux is negligible compared with bulk convection in the geostrophic regime, thereby paving the way for new experimental studies of geophysically relevant regimes of rotating convection.
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