86 research outputs found

    Predictive Scaling Laws for Spherical Rotating Dynamos

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    State of the art numerical models of the Geodynamo are still performed in a parameter regime extremely remote from the values relevant to the physics of the Earth's core. In order to establish a connection between dynamo modeling and the geophysical motivation, {it is necessary to use} scaling laws. Such scaling laws establish the dependence of essential quantities (such as the magnetic field strength) on measured or controlled quantities. They allow for a direct confrontation of advanced models with geophysical {constraints}. (...) We show that previous empirical scaling laws for the magnetic field strength essentially reflect the statistical balance between energy production and dissipation for saturated dynamos. Such power based scaling laws are thus necessarily valid for any dynamo in statistical equilibrium and applicable to any numerical model, irrespectively of the dynamo mechanism. We show that direct numerical fits can provide contradictory results owing to biases in the parameters space covered in the numerics and to the role of a priori hypothesis on the fraction of ohmic dissipation. We introduce predictive scaling laws, i.e. relations involving input parameters of the governing equations only. We guide our reasoning on physical considerations. We show that our predictive scaling laws can properly describe the numerical database and reflect the dominant forces balance at work in these numerical simulations. We highlight the dependence of the magnetic field strength on the rotation rate. Finally, our results stress that available numerical models operate in a viscous dynamical regime, which is not relevant to the Earth's core

    The dynamo bifurcation in rotating spherical shells

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    We investigate the nature of the dynamo bifurcation in a configuration applicable to the Earth's liquid outer core, i.e. in a rotating spherical shell with thermally driven motions. We show that the nature of the bifurcation, which can be either supercritical or subcritical or even take the form of isola (or detached lobes) strongly depends on the parameters. This dependence is described in a range of parameters numerically accessible (which unfortunately remains remote from geophysical application), and we show how the magnetic Prandtl number and the Ekman number control these transitions.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure

    Toward an asymptotic behaviour of the ABC dynamo

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    The ABC flow was originally introduced by Arnol'd to investigate Lagrangian chaos. It soon became the prototype example to illustrate magnetic-field amplification via fast dynamo action, i.e. dynamo action exhibiting magnetic-field amplification on a typical timescale independent of the electrical resistivity of the medium. Even though this flow is the most classical example for this important class of dynamos (with application to large-scale astrophysical objects), it was recently pointed out (Bouya Isma\"el and Dormy Emmanuel, Phys. Fluids, 25 (2013) 037103) that the fast dynamo nature of this flow was unclear, as the growth rate still depended on the magnetic Reynolds number at the largest values available so far (Rm=25000)(\text{Rm} = 25000) . Using state-of-the-art high-performance computing, we present high-resolution simulations (up to 40963) and extend the value of Rm\text{Rm} up to 5⋅105 5\cdot10^5 . Interestingly, even at these huge values, the growth rate of the leading eigenmode still depends on the controlling parameter and an asymptotic regime is not reached yet. We show that the maximum growth rate is a decreasing function of Rm\text{Rm} for the largest values of Rm\text{Rm} we could achieve (as anticipated in the above-mentioned paper). Slowly damped oscillations might indicate either a new mode crossing or that the system is approaching the limit of an essential spectrum

    Transition between viscous dipolar and inertial multipolar dynamos

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    We investigate the transition from steady dipolar to reversing multipolar dynamos. The Earth has been argued to lie close to this transition, which could offer a scenario for geomagnetic reversals. We show that the transition between dipolar and multipolar dynamos is characterized by a three terms balance (as opposed to the usually assumed two terms balance), which involves the non-gradient parts of inertial, viscous and Coriolis forces. We introduce from this equilibrium the sole parameter Ro E−1/3≡Re E2/3{{\rm Ro}}\,{{\rm E}}^{-1/3} \equiv {{\rm Re}}\,{{\rm E}}^{2/3}, which accurately describes the transition for a wide database of 132 fully three dimensional direct numerical simulations of spherical rotating dynamos (courtesy of U. Christensen). This resolves earlier contradictions in the literature on the relevant two,terms balance at the transition. Considering only a two terms balance between the non-gradient part of the Coriolis force and of inertial forces, provides the classical Ro/ℓu{{\rm Ro}}/{\ell_u} (Christensen and Aubert, 2006). This transition can be equivalently described by Re ℓu2{{\rm Re}} \, {\ell^{2}_u}, which corresponds to the two terms balance between the non-gradient part of inertial forces and viscous forces (Soderlund {\it et al.}, 2012).Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Mechanisms of Planetary and Stellar Dynamos

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    We review some of the recent progress on modeling planetary and stellar dynamos. Particular attention is given to the dynamo mechanisms and the resulting properties of the field. We present direct numerical simulations using a simple Boussinesq model. These simulations are interpreted using the classical mean-field formalism. We investigate the transition from steady dipolar to multipolar dynamo waves solutions varying different control parameters, and discuss the relevance to stellar magnetic fields. We show that owing to the role of the strong zonal flow, this transition is hysteretic. In the presence of stress-free boundary conditions, the bistability extends over a wide range of parameters.Comment: Proceedings of IAUS 294 "Solar and Astrophysical Dynamos and Magnetic Activity" Editors A.G. Kosovichev, E.M. de Gouveia Dal Pino, & Y.Yan, Cambridge University Press, to appear (2013

    Spin-down in a rapidly rotating cylinder container with mixed rigid and stress-free boundary conditions

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    A comprehensive study of the classical linear spin-down of a constant density viscous fluid (kinematic viscosity \nu) rotating rapidly (angular velocity \Omega) inside an axisymmetric cylindrical container (radius L, height H) with rigid boundaries, that follows the instantaneous small change in the boundary angular velocity at small Ekman number E=Îœ/H2Ωâ‰Ș1E=\nu/H^2\Omega \ll 1, was provided by Greenspan & Howard (1963). E1/2E^{1/2}-Ekman layers form quickly triggering inertial waves together with the dominant spin-down of the quasi-geostrophic (QG) interior flow on the O(E−1/2Ω−1)O(E^{-1/2}\Omega^{-1}) time-scale. On the longer lateral viscous diffusion time-scale O(L2/Îœ)O(L^2/\nu), the QG-flow responds to the E1/3E^{1/3}-side-wall shear-layers. In our variant the side-wall and top boundaries are stress-free; a setup motivated by the study of isolated atmospheric structures, such as tropical cyclones, or tornadoes. Relative to the unbounded plane layer case, spin-down is reduced (enhanced) by the presence of a slippery (rigid) side-wall. This is evinced by the QG-angular velocity, \omega*, evolution on the O(L^2/\nu) time-scale: Spatially, \omega* increases (decreases) outwards from the axis for a slippery (rigid) side-wall; temporally, the long-time (≫L2/Îœ)\gg L^2/\nu) behaviour is dominated by an eigensolution with a decay rate slightly slower (faster) than that for an unbounded layer. In our slippery side-wall case, the E1/2×E1/2E^{1/2} \times E^{1/2} corner region that forms at the side-wall intersection with the rigid base is responsible for a ln⁥E\ln E singularity within the E1/3E^{1/3}-layer causing our asymptotics to apply only at values of E far smaller than can be reached by our Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of the entire spin-down process. Instead, we solve the E1/3E^{1/3}-boundary-layer equations for given E numerically. Our hybrid asymptotic-numerical approach yields results in excellent agreement with our DNS.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figure

    Dipole Collapse and Dynamo Waves in Global Direct Numerical Simulations

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    Magnetic fields of low-mass stars and planets are thought to originate from self-excited dynamo action in their convective interiors. Observations reveal a variety of field topologies ranging from large-scale, axial dipole to more structured magnetic fields. In this article, we investigate more than 70 three-dimensional, self-consistent dynamo models obtained by direct numerical simulations. The control parameters, the aspect ratio and the mechanical boundary conditions have been varied to build up this sample of models. Both, strongly dipolar and multipolar models have been obtained. We show that these dynamo regimes can in general be distinguished by the ratio of a typical convective length scale to the Rossby radius. Models with a predominantly dipolar magnetic field were obtained, if the convective length scale is at least an order of magnitude larger than the Rossby radius. Moreover, we highlight the role of the strong shear associated with the geostrophic zonal flow for models with stress-free boundary conditions. In this case, the above transition disappears and is replaced by a region of bistability for which dipolar and multipolar dynamos co-exist. We interpret our results in terms of dynamo eigenmodes using the so-called test-field method. We can thus show that models in the dipolar regime are characterized by an isolated 'single mode'. Competing overtones become significant as the boundary to multipolar dynamos is approached. We discuss how these findings relate to previous models and to observations.Comment: 35 pages, 16 figure
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