Title: The growth of magnetic field energy in conducting fluids
1The growth of magnetic field energy in conducting
fluids
- Philip Livermore
- Andrew Jackson
School of Earth Sciences University of Leeds, UK
2Introduction
- The Earths magnetic field
- Generated in fluid outer core by buoyancy driven
motion
- Field is complex, but hope
- to understand large scale features by simple
models
3What we know
Observations Under various assumptions Surface
measurements
Core-Mantle Boundary Experiments Laboratory
dynamos So far spherical dynamos
unsuccessful Numerical simulations E Viscous
force/Coriolis force 10-15 in Earth Numerical
problems, cannot resolve scales
4Magnetic field generation
- A magnetic field B evolves according to
Stretching advection Diffusion
5Choice of flow
- Spherical geometry
- Flow defined in electrical
insulator - Non-slip BCs
- Simple cases axisymmetric / no inner core
Poloidal
Toroidal
Streamlines
Azimuthal flow intensity
Meridional section f0
6Eigenmode analysis
- To investigate stability of induction equation
- Make ansatz
- Write
- For tgtgt1 the most unstable eigenmode dominates
- Stability depends on the existence of a growing
eigenmode - Issues
- sensitivity
- not necessarily interested in tgtgt1, only when
Bgtgt1 - on shorter time scales, other effects may become
important
7Subcritical growth
- Consider
- combination of
- decaying modes
- Superposition of decaying non-orthogonal
eigenmodes can produce transient growth - Induction equation is non self-adjoint
8Stability
- Self-adjoint problems
- eigenvectors orthogonal - no transient growth
- stability completely determined by eigenvalues
- Non self-adjoint problems
- eigenvectors not orthogonal
- transient growth may occur even when all
eigenmodes decay - Energy methods look at onset of any growth
9The magnetic energy equation
10Energetic instability
11A Spectral method
- Spectral method - write
- where Bi is divergence-less and satisfies all
BCs
- Bi has 3 components, but
- Write in poloidal/toroidal decomposition
- Recombined Chebyshev polynomials
- Each Bi is either toroidal/poloidal with a
particular harmonic and radial form.
12A variational method
- Suppose is attained at some B
- Perturb it by
- No 1st order changes in
- Expand both B and dB as
- Generalised self-adjoint eigenvalue problem for
B
13Examples at critical Rm
stretching
14Summary of energetic analysis
- Rmc O(10)
- Robust
- in that small changes in the flow do not affect
the results - Physically attributable to stretching by the flow
15Transience
- Described the onset of instability
- How large can these get before decay?
- What time scales are relevant?
- Discretise induction equation with basis Bi
16Energy envelopes
- Calculate for a given time
17Axisymmetric toroidal flow example
- Cannot sustain magnetic fields indefinitely
(1 Dipole diffusion time 20,000 years for the
Earth)
18Conclusions
- Energetic instability is robust and predicts
- critical Rm O(10).
- In non self-adjoint systems eigenmode analysis is
not the full story, and transient instabilities
may lead to transition to the non-linear regime
where the Lorentz force is important even in
eigenvalue-stable flows. - Large planets or galaxies have such long
diffusion timescales that linear analysis may
tell us little.