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Turbulent geodynamo simulations: a leap towards Earth's core

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TLDR
In this paper, a sequence of three convection-driven simulations in a rapidly rotating spherical shell is used to reach realistic turbulent regime in direct numerical simulations of the geodynamo.
Abstract
We present an attempt to reach realistic turbulent regime in direct numerical simulations of the geodynamo. We rely on a sequence of three convection-driven simulations in a rapidly rotating spherical shell. The most extreme case reaches towards the Earth's core regime by lowering viscosity (magnetic Prandtl number Pm=0.1) while maintaining vigorous convection (magnetic Reynolds number Rm>500) and rapid rotation (Ekman number E=1e-7), at the limit of what is feasible on today's supercomputers. A detailed and comprehensive analysis highlights several key features matching geomagnetic observations or dynamo theory predictions – all present together in the same simulation – but it also unveils interesting insights relevant for Earth's core dynamics. In this strong-field, dipole-dominated dynamo simulation, the magnetic energy is one order of magnitude larger than the kinetic energy. The spatial distribution of magnetic intensity is highly heterogeneous, and a stark dynamical contrast exists between the interior and the exterior of the tangent cylinder (the cylinder parallel to the axis of rotation that circumscribes the inner core). In the interior, the magnetic field is strongest, and is associated with a vigorous twisted polar vortex, whose dynamics may occasionally lead to the formation of a reverse polar flux patch at the surface of the shell. Furthermore, the strong magnetic field also allows accumulation of light material within the tangent cylinder, leading to stable stratification there. Torsional Alfven waves are frequently triggered in the vicinity of the tangent cylinder and propagate towards the equator. Outside the tangent cylinder, the magnetic field inhibits the growth of zonal winds and the kinetic energy is mostly non-zonal. Spatio-temporal analysis indicates that the low-frequency, non-zonal flow is quite geostrophic (columnar) and predominantly large-scale: an m=1 eddy spontaneously emerges in our most extreme simulations, without any heterogeneous boundary forcing. Our spatio-temporal analysis further reveals that (i) the low-frequency, large-scale flow is governed by a balance between Coriolis and buoyancy forces – magnetic field and flow tend to align, minimizing the Lorentz force; (ii) the high-frequency flow obeys a balance between magnetic and Coriolis forces; (iii) the convective plumes mostly live at an intermediate scale, whose dynamics is driven by a 3-term 1 MAC balance – involving Coriolis, Lorentz and buoyancy forces. However, small-scale (E^{1/3}) quasi-geostrophic convection is still observed in the regions of low magnetic intensity.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Solitary magnetostrophic Rossby waves in spherical shells

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the slow mode of the Rossby wave in the presence of a toroidal magnetic field and zonal flow by means of quasi-geostrophic models for thick spherical shells.
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Determination of Specific Time Variations in the Energy of the Earth’s Magnetic Potential Field from the IGRF Model

TL;DR: In this article, a method for the analysis of time series based on a logarithmic derivative or a specific variation is proposed, where each specific variation provides an equally probable contribution to its manifestation within a considered series, and the possibility for its manifestation outward is the same as within.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asymptotic behaviour of rotating convection-driven dynamos in the plane layer geometry

TL;DR: In this article , the authors compare results of the simulations with previously developed asymptotic theory that is applicable in the limit of rapid rotation and find that all the simulations are in the quasi-geostrophic regime in which the Coriolis and pressure gradient forces are approximately balanced at leading order, whereas all other forces including the Lorentz force act as perturbations.
Posted ContentDOI

pygeodyn 1.0.0: a Python package for geomagnetic data assimilation

TL;DR: The pygeodyn as mentioned in this paper is a sequential geomagnetic data assimilation package written in Python that gives access to the core surface dynamics, controlled by geOMagnetic observations, by means of a stochastic model anchored to geodynamo simulation statistics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental study of the convection in a rotating tangent cylinder.

TL;DR: In this paper, a Tangent Cylinder (TC) was investigated in a configuration relevant to the liquid core of the Earth, and the resulting convection that develops above the heater, i.e. within the TC, was shown to set in for critical Rayleigh numbers and wavenumbers respectively scaling as $Ra_c\sim E 4/3}$ and $a_c \sim E 1/3$ with the Ekman number $E$.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A three-dimensional self-consistent computer simulation of a geomagnetic field reversal

TL;DR: In this article, a three-dimensional, self-consistent numerical model of the geodynamo is described, which maintains a magnetic field for over 40,000 years, including a successful reversal of the dipole moment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scaling properties of convection-driven dynamos in rotating spherical shells and application to planetary magnetic fields

TL;DR: In this paper, an extensive set of dynamo models in rotating spherical shells, varying all relevant control parameters by at least two orders of magnitude, were studied and their scaling laws were established.
Journal ArticleDOI

Equations governing convection in earth's core and the geodynamo

TL;DR: In this article, a closed system of equations and boundary conditions is derived that governs core convection and the geodynamo, and it is concluded that compositional convection may not dominate thermal convection, as had previously been argued by Braginsky.
Journal ArticleDOI

On almost rigid rotations

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that if the perturbation velocity is a smooth function of r, the distance from the axis, then the angular velocity of the main body of fluid is determined by balancing the outflow from the boundary layer on one disc with the inflow to the boundary layers on the other at the same value of r.
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