4,983 research outputs found
Search for non-helical disc dynamos in simulations
The possibility of non-helical large scale dynamo action is investigated
using three-dimensional simulations of global accretion discs as well as
idealized local simulations without rotation and only shear. Particular
emphasis is placed on a certain correlation between vorticity and azimuthal
velocity gradient which has been predicted to drive large scale dynamo action,
independent of the presence or absence of kinetic helicity. In the global disc
simulations two types of behaviours are found: those which do show this type of
velocity correlation and those which do not. The former ones are typically also
the cases where the resistivity is larger. The latter ones show signs typical
of dynamo action based on the usual helicity effect. In the idealized
simulations without rotation and just shear the above correlation is found to
be particularly strong. In both cases there is, as expected, a systematic flux
of magnetic helicity through the midplane. However, very little helicity flux
leaves the domain through the top and bottom boundaries. The idealized
simulations reveal that much of this systematic flux comes from the rotational
component of the helicity flux and does not contribute to its divergence.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures, 5 tables, submitted to Astron. & Astrophy
Domain structure of epitaxial Co films with perpendicular anisotropy
Epitaxial hcp Cobalt films with pronounced c-axis texture have been prepared
by pulsed lased deposition (PLD) either directly onto Al2O3 (0001) single
crystal substrates or with an intermediate Ruthenium buffer layer. The crystal
structure and epitaxial growth relation was studied by XRD, pole figure
measurements and reciprocal space mapping. Detailed VSM analysis shows that the
perpendicular anisotropy of these highly textured Co films reaches the
magnetocrystalline anisotropy of hcp-Co single crystal material. Films were
prepared with thickness t of 20 nm < t < 100 nm to study the crossover from
in-plane magnetization to out-of-plane magnetization in detail. The analysis of
the periodic domain pattern observed by magnetic force microscopy allows to
determine the critical minimum thickness below which the domains adopt a pure
in-plane orientation. Above the critical thickness the width of the stripe
domains is evaluated as a function of the film thickness and compared with
domain theory. Especially the discrepancies at smallest film thicknesses show
that the system is in an intermediate state between in-plane and out-of-plane
domains, which is not described by existing analytical domain models
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
Mean Field Dynamos with Algebraic and Dynamic alpha-Quenchings
Calculations for mean field dynamo models (in both full spheres and spherical
shells), with both algebraic and dynamic --quenchings, show qualitative
as well as quantitative differences and similarities in the dynamical behaviour
of these models. We summarise and enhance recent results with extra examples.
Overall, the effect of using a dynamic appears to be complicated and
is affected by the region of parameter space examined.Comment: 6 pages, 2 postscript figures, also available at
http://www.maths.qmw.ac.uk/~eo
Competition of rotation and stratification in flux concentrations
In a strongly stratified turbulent layer, a uniform horizontal magnetic field
can become unstable to spontaneously form local flux concentrations due to a
negative contribution of turbulence to the large-scale (mean-field) magnetic
pressure. This mechanism, called the negative effective magnetic pressure
instability (NEMPI), is of interest in connection with dynamo scenarios where
most of the magnetic field resides in the bulk of the convection zone, and not
at the bottom. Recent work using the mean-field hydromagnetic equations has
shown that NEMPI becomes suppressed at rather low rotation rates with Coriolis
numbers as low as 0.1.}{Here we extend these earlier investigations by studying
the effects of rotation both on the development of NEMPI and on the effective
magnetic pressure. We also quantify the kinetic helicity from direct numerical
simulations (DNS) and compare with earlier work.}{To calculate the rotational
effect on the effective magnetic pressure we consider both DNS and analytical
studies using the approach. To study the effects of rotation on the
development of NEMPI we use both DNS and mean-field calculations of the 3D
hydromagnetic equations in a Cartesian domain.}{We find that the growth rates
of NEMPI from earlier mean-field calculations are well reproduced with DNS,
provided the Coriolis number is below about 0.06. In that case, kinetic and
magnetic helicities are found to be weak. For faster rotation, dynamo action
becomes possible. However, there is an intermediate range of rotation rates
where dynamo action on its own is not yet possible, but the rotational
suppression of NEMPI is being alleviated.}{Production of magnetic flux
concentrations through the suppression of turbulent pressure appears to be
possible only in the upper-most layers of the Sun, where the convective
turnover time is less than 2 hours.}Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures submitted to A&
Magnetic flux concentrations from dynamo-generated fields
The mean-field theory of magnetized stellar convection gives rise to the two
possibility of distinct instabilities: the large-scale dynamo instability,
operating in the bulk of the convection zone, and a negative effective magnetic
pressure instability (NEMPI) operating in the strongly stratified surface
layers. The latter might be important in connection with magnetic spot
formation, but the growth rate of NEMPI is suppressed with increasing rotation
rates, although recent direct numerical simulations (DNS) have shown a
subsequent increase in the growth rate. We examine quantitatively whether this
increase in the growth rate of NEMPI can be explained by an alpha squared
mean-field dynamo, and whether both NEMPI and the dynamo instability can
operate at the same time. We use both DNS and mean-field simulations (MFS) to
solve the underlying equations numerically either with or without an imposed
horizontal field. We use the test-field method to compute relevant dynamo
coefficients. DNS show that magnetic flux concentrations are still possible up
to rotation rates above which the large-scale dynamo effect produces mean
magnetic fields. The resulting DNS growth rates are quantitatively well
reproduced with MFS. As expected, for weak or vanishing rotation, the growth
rate of NEMPI increases with increasing gravity, but there is a correction term
for strong gravity and large turbulent magnetic diffusivity. Magnetic flux
concentrations are still possible for rotation rates above which dynamo action
takes over. For the solar rotation rate, the corresponding turbulent turnover
time is about 5 hours, with dynamo action commencing in the layers beneath.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, submitted to A&
Inertial range scaling in numerical turbulence with hyperviscosity
Numerical turbulence with hyperviscosity is studied and compared with direct
simulations using ordinary viscosity and data from wind tunnel experiments. It
is shown that the inertial range scaling is similar in all three cases.
Furthermore, the bottleneck effect is approximately equally broad (about one
order of magnitude) in these cases and only its height is increased in the
hyperviscous case--presumably as a consequence of the steeper decent of the
spectrum in the hyperviscous subrange. The mean normalized dissipation rate is
found to be in agreement with both wind tunnel experiments and direct
simulations. The structure function exponents agree with the She-Leveque model.
Decaying turbulence with hyperviscosity still gives the usual t^{-1.25} decay
law for the kinetic energy, and also the bottleneck effect is still present and
about equally strong.Comment: Final version (7 pages
Rotational effects on the negative magnetic pressure instability
The surface layers of the Sun are strongly stratified. In the presence of
turbulence with a weak mean magnetic field, a large-scale instability resulting
in the formation of non-uniform magnetic structures, can be excited over the
scale of many turbulent eddies or convection cells. This instability is caused
by a negative contribution of turbulence to the effective (mean-field) magnetic
pressure and has previously been discussed in connection with the formation of
active regions and perhaps sunspots. We want to understand the effects of
rotation on this instability in both two and three dimensions. We use
mean-field magnetohydrodynamics in a parameter regime in which the properties
of the negative effective magnetic pressure instability have previously been
found to be in agreement with those of direct numerical simulations. We find
that the instability is suppressed already for relatively slow rotation with
Coriolis numbers (i.e. inverse Rossby numbers) around 0.2. The suppression is
strongest at the equator. In the nonlinear regime, we find traveling wave
solutions with propagation in the prograde direction at the equator with
additional poleward migration away from the equator. The prograde rotation of
the magnetic pattern near the equator is argued to be a possible explanation
for the faster rotation speed of magnetic tracers found on the Sun. In the bulk
of the domain, kinetic and current helicities are negative in the northern
hemisphere and positive in the southern.Comment: 8 pages, 13 figures, submitted to A&
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