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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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Dynamo theories.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a self-contained graduate-student level introduction to the theory and modelling of the dynamo effect in turbulent fluids and plasmas, blended with a review of current research in the field.
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Geomagnetic jerks and rapid hydromagnetic waves focusing at Earth's core surface

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the acceleration of Earth's magnetic field can be explained by the arrival of localized Alfven wave packets radiated from sudden buoyancy releases inside the core.
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Turbulent convective length scale in planetary cores

TL;DR: Numerical modelling of rotating turbulent convective flows shows that the length scale of convection in planetary cores is set by the flow speed and not by the fluid viscosity, and the need to resolve the numerically inaccessible viscous scale could be relaxed in future more realistic geodynamo simulations.
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Rotating thermal convection in liquid gallium: multi-modal flow, absent steady columns

TL;DR: In this paper, a cylinder of aspect ratio with liquid gallium as the working fluid was used to study the dynamics of low-number convective flows in low-volatile fluids.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Parameter dependences of convection driven dynamos in rotating spherical fluid shells

TL;DR: In this article, the transition from dynamos dominated by non-axisymmetric components of the magnetic field to those dominated by the axishemetric components depends on the magnetic Prandtl number as well as on the ordinary PrandTL number for higher values of the rotation parameter.
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Torsional oscillations in dynamo simulations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors have performed several dynamo simulations at different parameters to check whether Taylor state and torsional oscillations can also be identified in a numerical model, and the amplitude of TOs amounts to not more than a few percent of the total flow amplitude in the simulations, which renders these motions insignificant for the long-term dynamo process.
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Predictive scaling laws for spherical rotating dynamos

TL;DR: In this paper, a scaling law for the magnetic field strength of the Earth's core has been proposed, which is applicable for any dynamo in statistical equilibrium and applicable to any numerical model, irrespectively of the dynamo mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scale variability in convection-driven MHD dynamos at low Ekman number

TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical study of convection-driven MHD dynamos in a rapidly rotating spherical shell with the Ekman number, E, down to 2 × 1 0 − 6 and the magnetic Prandtl number, Pm, down to 0.2.

An accelerating high-latitude jet in Earth's core

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the current accelerating phase may be part of a longer-term fluctuation of the jet causing both eastward and westward movement of magnetic features over historical periods, and may contribute to recent changes in torsional wave activity and the rotation direction of the inner core.
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