Effect of Hyperdiffusivity on Turbulent Dynamos with Helicity
Open Access
- 18 January 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 88 (5) , 055003
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.88.055003
Abstract
In numerical studies of turbulence, hyperviscosity is often used as a tool to extend the inertial subrange and to reduce the dissipative subrange. By analogy, hyperdiffusivity (or hyperresistivity) is sometimes used in magnetohydrodynamics. The underlying assumption is that only the small scales are affected by this manipulation. In the present paper, possible side effects on the evolution of the large-scale magnetic field are investigated. It is found that for turbulent flows with helicity, hyperdiffusivity causes the dynamo-generated magnetic field to saturate at a higher level than normal diffusivity. This result is successfully interpreted in terms of magnetic helicity conservation, which also predicts that full saturation is reached only after a time comparable to the large-scale magnetic (hyper)diffusion time.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Numerical Analysis of Magnetic Field Amplification by TurbulenceThe Astrophysical Journal, 2001
- Effects of hyperdiffusivities on dynamo simulationsGeophysical Research Letters, 2000
- Constraints on the Magnitude of α in Dynamo TheoryThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- Nonlocal Bottleneck Effect in Two-Dimensional TurbulencePhysical Review Letters, 1998
- Convection driven geodynamo models of varying Ekman numberGeophysical & Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics, 1998
- Self-Consistency Constraints on the Dynamo MechanismThe Astrophysical Journal, 1995
- Bottleneck Effects in Turbulence: Scaling Phenomena inversusSpacePhysical Review Letters, 1995
- Three-dimensional supersonic homogeneous turbulence: A numerical studyPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Statistical properties of MHD turbulence and turbulent dynamoPhysics of Fluids A: Fluid Dynamics, 1991
- A Study of Barotropic Model Flows: Intermittency, Waves and PredictabilityJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1981