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Journal ArticleDOI

Hydromagnetic convection in a rapidly rotating fluid layer

I. A. Eltayeb
- 11 Jan 1972 - 
- Vol. 326, Iss: 1565, pp 229-254
TLDR
In this article, the linear stability of a rotating, electrically conducting viscous layer, heated from below and cooled from above, and lying in a uniform magnetic field is examined, using the Boussinesq approximation.
Abstract
The linear stability of a rotating, electrically conducting viscous layer, heated from below and cooled from above, and lying in a uniform magnetic field is examined, using the Boussinesq approximation. Several orientations of the magnetic field and rotation axes are considered under a variety of different surface conditions. The analysis is, however, limited to large Taylor numbers, T , and large Hartmann numbers, M . (These are non-dimensional measures of the rotation rate and magnetic field strength, respectively.) Except when field and rotation are both vertical, the most unstable mode at marginal stability has the form of a horizontal roll whose orientation depends in a complex way on the directions and strengths of the field and angular velocity. For example, when the field is horizontal and the rotation is vertical, the roll is directed parallel to the field, provided that the field is sufficiently weak. In this case, the Rayleigh number, R (the non-dimensional measure of the applied temperature contrast) must reach a critical value, R c , which is O ( T 2/5 ) before convection will occur. If, however, the field is sufficiently strong [ T = O ( M 4 )], the roll makes an acute angle with the direction of the field, and R c = O ( T 1/2 ), i.e. the critical Rayleigh number is much smaller than when the magnetic field is absent. Also, in this case the mean applied temperature gradient and the wavelength of the tesselated convection pattern are both independent of viscosity when the layer is marginally stable. Furthermore, the Taylor-Proudman theorem and its extension to the hydromagnetic case are no longer applicable even qualitatively. Over the interior of the layer, however, the Coriolis forces to which the convective motions are subjected are, to leading order, balanced by the Lorentz forces. The results obtained in this paper have a bearing on the possibility of a thermally driven steady hydromagnetic dynamo.

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Citations
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On the genesis of the Earth's magnetism

TL;DR: The geophysical relevance of the experiments and simulations is called into question: the dynamics of Earth's core are too complex, and operate across time and length scales too broad to be captured by any single laboratory experiment, or resolved on present-day computers.
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Hydromagnetics of rotating fluids

TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamics of a rapidly rotating electrically conducting fluid in the presence of a corotating magnetic field are studied. But the authors focus on the dynamics in the case of a single magnetic field.
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Experiments on Rayleigh-Bénard convection, magnetoconvection and rotating magnetoconvection in liquid gallium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured heat transfer in a low-Prandtl-number (Pr = 0.023), electrically conducting fluid as a function of the applied temperature difference, rotation rate, applied magnetic field strength and fluid-layer aspect ratio.
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On the theory of the geodynamo

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the development of geodynamo theory leading from Larmor's original hypothesis (Larmor, 1919, Rep. Not. Assoc. Phys., 4: 372-447) to the proofs by Backus and Herzenberg (1958, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. A, 250: 543-585) that three-dimensional dynamo action is possible.
References
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MonographDOI

Théorie analytique de la chaleur

TL;DR: Fourier's Theorie Analytique de la Chaleur as mentioned in this paper was originally published in 1822 and was used to study the mathematical laws governing heat diffusion and proposed that an infinite mathematical series may be used to analyse the conduction of heat in solids.
Book

Structure and evolution of the stars

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the evolution of the Stellar Structure and its evolution in the early and advanced phases, and conclude that the early evolution is the most similar to ours.