Gopinath, Venkatesh ; Sreenivasan, Binod (2015) On the control of rapidly rotating convection by an axially varying magnetic field Geophysical & Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics, 109 (6). pp. 567-586. ISSN 0309-1929
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1080/03091929.2015.1092024
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03091929.2015.1092024
Abstract
The magnetic field in rapidly rotating dynamos is spatially inhomogeneous. The axial variation of the magnetic field is of particular importance because tall columnar vortices aligned with the rotation axis form at the onset of convection. The classical picture of magnetoconvection with constant or axially varying magnetic fields is that the Rayleigh number and wavenumber at onset decrease appreciably from their non-magnetic values. Nonlinear dynamo simulations show that the axial lengthscale of the self-generated azimuthal magnetic field becomes progressively smaller as we move towards a rapidly rotating regime. With a small-scale field, however, the magnetic control of convection is different from that in previous studies with a uniform or large-scale field. This study looks at the competing viscous and magnetic mode instabilities when the Ekman number E (ratio of viscous to Coriolis forces) is small. As the applied magnetic field strength (measured by the Elsasser number Λ) increases, the critical Rayleigh number for onset of convection initially increases in a viscous branch, reaches an apex where both viscous and magnetic instabilities co-exist, and then falls in the magnetic branch. The magnetic mode of onset is notable for its dramatic suppression of convection in the bulk of the fluid layer where the field is weak. The viscous–magnetic mode transition occurs at Λ∼1, which implies that small-scale convection can exist at field strengths higher than previously thought. In spherical shell dynamos with basal heating, convection near the tangent cylinder is likely to be in the magnetic mode. The wavenumber of convection is only slightly reduced by the self-generated magnetic field at Λ∼1, in agreement with previous planetary dynamo models. The back reaction of the magnetic field on the flow is, however, visible in the difference in kinetic helicity between cyclonic and anticyclonic vortices.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Taylor and Francis Group. |
ID Code: | 119824 |
Deposited On: | 17 Jun 2021 10:22 |
Last Modified: | 17 Jun 2021 10:22 |
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