The origin and structure of the magnetic fields in the interstellar medium of
spiral galaxies is investigated with 3D, non-ideal, compressible MHD
simulations, including stratification in the galactic gravity field,
differential rotation and radiative cooling. A rectangular domain, 1x1x2
kpc^{3} in size, spans both sides of the galactic mid-plane. Supernova
explosions drive transonic turbulence. A seed magnetic field grows
exponentially to reach a statistically steady state within 1.6 Gyr. Following
Germano (1992) we use volume averaging with a Gaussian kernel to separate
magnetic field into a mean field and fluctuations. Such averaging does not
satisfy all Reynolds rules, yet allows a formulation of mean-field theory. The
mean field thus obtained varies in both space and time. Growth rates differ for
the mean-field and fluctuating field and there is clear scale separation
between the two elements, whose integral scales are about 0.7 kpc and 0.3 kpc,
respectively.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Monthly Notices Letter