2,250 research outputs found
The inverse cascade and nonlinear alpha-effect in simulations of isotropic helical hydromagnetic turbulence
A numerical model of isotropic homogeneous turbulence with helical forcing is
investigated. The resulting flow, which is essentially the prototype of the
alpha^2 dynamo of mean-field dynamo theory, produces strong dynamo action with
an additional large scale field on the scale of the box (at wavenumber k=1;
forcing is at k=5). This large scale field is nearly force-free and exceeds the
equipartition value. As the magnetic Reynolds number R_m increases, the
saturation field strength and the growth rate of the dynamo increase. However,
the time it takes to built up the large scale field from equipartition to its
final super-equipartition value increases with magnetic Reynolds number. The
large scale field generation can be identified as being due to nonlocal
interactions originating from the forcing scale, which is characteristic of the
alpha-effect. Both alpha and turbulent magnetic diffusivity eta_t are
determined simultaneously using numerical experiments where the mean-field is
modified artificially. Both quantities are quenched in a R_m-dependent fashion.
The evolution of the energy of the mean field matches that predicted by an
alpha^2 dynamo model with similar alpha and eta_t quenchings. For this model an
analytic solution is given which matches the results of the simulations. The
simulations are numerically robust in that the shape of the spectrum at large
scales is unchanged when changing the resolution from 30^3 to 120^3 meshpoints,
or when increasing the magnetic Prandtl number (viscosity/magnetic diffusivity)
from 1 to 100. Increasing the forcing wavenumber to 30 (i.e. increasing the
scale separation) makes the inverse cascade effect more pronounced, although it
remains otherwise qualitatively unchanged.Comment: 21 pages, 26 figures, ApJ (accepted
Magnetohydrodynamic turbulence in warped accretion discs
Warped, precessing accretion discs appear in a range of astrophysical
systems, for instance the X-ray binary Her X-1 and in the active nucleus of
NGC4258. In a warped accretion disc there are horizontal pressure gradients
that drive an epicyclic motion. We have studied the interaction of this
epicyclic motion with the magnetohydrodynamic turbulence in numerical
simulations. We find that the turbulent stress acting on the epicyclic motion
is comparable in size to the stress that drives the accretion, however an
important ingredient in the damping of the epicyclic motion is its parametric
decay into inertial waves.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the 20th Texas Symposium on
Relativistic Astrophysics, J. C. Wheeler & H. Martel (eds.
Turbulent transport in hydromagnetic flows
The predictive power of mean-field theory is emphasized by comparing theory
with simulations under controlled conditions. The recently developed test-field
method is used to extract turbulent transport coefficients both in kinematic as
well as nonlinear and quasi-kinematic cases. A striking example of the
quasi-kinematic method is provided by magnetic buoyancy-driven flows that
produce an alpha effect and turbulent diffusion.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, topical issue of Physica Scripta on turbulent
mixing and beyon
The response of a turbulent accretion disc to an imposed epicyclic shearing motion
We excite an epicyclic motion, whose amplitude depends on the vertical
position, , in a simulation of a turbulent accretion disc. An epicyclic
motion of this kind may be caused by a warping of the disc. By studying how the
epicyclic motion decays we can obtain information about the interaction between
the warp and the disc turbulence. A high amplitude epicyclic motion decays
first by exciting inertial waves through a parametric instability, but its
subsequent exponential damping may be reproduced by a turbulent viscosity. We
estimate the effective viscosity parameter, , pertaining to
such a vertical shear. We also gain new information on the properties of the
disc turbulence in general, and measure the usual viscosity parameter,
, pertaining to a horizontal (Keplerian) shear. We find that,
as is often assumed in theoretical studies, is approximately
equal to and both are much less than unity, for the field
strengths achieved in our local box calculations of turbulence. In view of the
smallness () of and we conclude
that for the timescale for diffusion
or damping of a warp is much shorter than the usual viscous timescale. Finally,
we review the astrophysical implications.Comment: 12 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS accepte
Chandrasekhar-Kendall functions in astrophysical dynamos
Some of the contributions of Chandrasekhar to the field of
magnetohydrodynamics are highlighted. Particular emphasis is placed on the
Chandrasekhar-Kendall functions that allow a decomposition of a vector field
into right- and left-handed contributions. Magnetic energy spectra of both
contributions are shown for a new set of helically forced simulations at
resolutions higher than what has been available so far. For a forcing function
with positive helicity, these simulations show a forward cascade of the
right-handed contributions to the magnetic field and nonlocal inverse transfer
for the left-handed contributions. The speed of inverse transfer is shown to
decrease with increasing value of the magnetic Reynolds number.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, proceedings of the Chandrasekhar Centenary
Conference, to be published in PRAMANA - Journal of Physic
The alpha-effect and current helicity for fast sheared rotators
We explore the alpha-effect and the small-scale current helicity, for the
case of weakly compressible magnetically driven turbulence that is subjected to
the differential rotation. No restriction is applied to the amplitude of
angular velocity, i.e., the derivations presented are valid for an arbitrary
Coriolis number, though the differential rotation itself is assumed to be weak.
The expressions obtained are used to explore the possible distributions of
alpha-effect and current helicity in convection zones (CZ) of the solar-type
stars. The implications of the obtained results to the mean-field dynamo models
are discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
Current status of turbulent dynamo theory: From large-scale to small-scale dynamos
Several recent advances in turbulent dynamo theory are reviewed. High
resolution simulations of small-scale and large-scale dynamo action in periodic
domains are compared with each other and contrasted with similar results at low
magnetic Prandtl numbers. It is argued that all the different cases show
similarities at intermediate length scales. On the other hand, in the presence
of helicity of the turbulence, power develops on large scales, which is not
present in non-helical small-scale turbulent dynamos. At small length scales,
differences occur in connection with the dissipation cutoff scales associated
with the respective value of the magnetic Prandtl number. These differences are
found to be independent of whether or not there is large-scale dynamo action.
However, large-scale dynamos in homogeneous systems are shown to suffer from
resistive slow-down even at intermediate length scales. The results from
simulations are connected to mean field theory and its applications. Recent
work on helicity fluxes to alleviate large-scale dynamo quenching, shear
dynamos, nonlocal effects and magnetic structures from strong density
stratification are highlighted. Several insights which arise from analytic
considerations of small-scale dynamos are discussed.Comment: 36 pages, 11 figures, Spa. Sci. Rev., submitted to the special issue
"Magnetism in the Universe" (ed. A. Balogh
The Entropy of Square-Free Words
Finite alphabets of at least three letters permit the construction of
square-free words of infinite length. We show that the entropy density is
strictly positive and derive reasonable lower and upper bounds. Finally, we
present an approximate formula which is asymptotically exact with rapid
convergence in the number of letters.Comment: 18 page
Direct simulations of a supernova-driven galactic dynamo
Supernovae are known to be the dominant energy source for driving turbulence
in the interstellar medium. Yet, their effect on magnetic field amplification
in spiral galaxies is still poorly understood. Previous analytical models,
based on the evolution of isolated, non-interacting supernova remnants,
predicted a dominant vertical pumping that would render dynamo action
improbable. In the present work, we address the issue of vertical transport,
which is thought to be the key process that inhibits dynamo action in the
galactic context. We aim to demonstrate that supernova driving is a powerful
mechanism to amplify galactic magnetic fields. We conduct direct numerical
simulations in the framework of resistive magnetohydrodynamics. Our local box
model of the interstellar medium comprises optically-thin radiative cooling, an
external gravitational potential, and background shear. Dynamo coefficients for
mean-field models are measured by means of passive test fields. Our simulations
show that supernova-driven turbulence in conjunction with shear leads to an
exponential amplification of the mean magnetic field. We found turbulent
pumping to be directed inward and approximately balanced by a galactic wind.Comment: minor changes, 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
Cosmological Magnetic Fields from Primordial Helicity
Primordial magnetic fields may account for all or part of the fields observed
in galaxies. We consider the evolution of the magnetic fields created by
pseudoscalar effects in the early universe. Such processes can create
force-free fields of maximal helicity; we show that for such a field magnetic
energy inverse cascades to larger scales than it would have solely by flux
freezing and cosmic expansion. For fields generated at the electroweak phase
transition, we find that the predicted wavelength today can in principle be as
large as 10 kpc, and the field strength can be as large as 10^{-10} G.Comment: 13 page
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