The role of buoyancy in polarity reversals of the geodynamo

Sreenivasan, Binod ; Sahoo, Swarandeep ; Dhama, Gaurav (2014) The role of buoyancy in polarity reversals of the geodynamo Geophysical Journal International, 199 (3). pp. 1698-1708. ISSN 0956-540X

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggu340

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggu340

Abstract

We investigate polarity reversals in the geodynamo using a rotating, convection-driven dynamo model. As the flow in rapidly rotating convection is dominated by columns aligned with the axis of rotation, the focus is on the dynamics of columnar vortices. By studying the growth of a seed magnetic field to a stable axial dipole field, we show that the magnetic field acts in ways that significantly enhance the relative helicity between cyclonic and anticyclonic vortices. This flow asymmetry is the hallmark of a dipolar dynamo. Strong buoyancy, on the other hand, offsets the effect of the magnetic field, establishing parity between positive and negative vortices. As the dipole field is deprived of the helicity required to support itself, the dynamo is pushed into a reversing state. This is a likely regime for polarity reversals in the Earth’s core. The integral lengthscale at which buoyancy injects energy is not significantly different from the convective flow lengthscale, which implies that buoyancy does not feed vortices at the small scales where non-linear inertia is present. The lengthscale at which the Lorentz force acts in the reversing dynamo is small, which may allow the passive presence of non-linear inertia in the small scales.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Royal Astronomical Society.
Keywords:Numerical Solutions; Dynamo: Theories And Simulations; Reversals: Process; Timescale; Magnetostratigraphy; Planetary Interiors.
ID Code:119826
Deposited On:17 Jun 2021 10:28
Last Modified:17 Jun 2021 10:28

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