scholarly journals Anisotropy in MHD turbulence due to a mean magnetic field

1983 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 525-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
John V. Shebalin ◽  
William H. Matthaeus ◽  
David Montgomery

The development of anisotropy in an initially isotropie spectrum is studied numerically for two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. The anisotropy develops through the combined effects of an externally imposed d.c. magnetic field and viscous and resistive dissipation at high wavenumbers. The effect is most pronounced at high mechanical and magnetic Reynolds numbers. The anisotropy is greater at the higher wavenumbers.

1994 ◽  
Vol 280 ◽  
pp. 95-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean Oughton ◽  
Eric R. Priest ◽  
William H. Matthaeus

Building on results from two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence (Shebalin, Matthaeus & Montgomery 1983), the development of anisotropic states from initially isotropic ones is investigated numerically for fully three-dimensional incompressible MHD turbulence. It is found that when an external d.c. magnetic field (B0) is imposed on viscous and resistive MHD systems, excitations are preferentially transferred to modes with wavevectors perpendicular to B0). The anisotropy increases with increasing mechanical and magnetic Reynolds numbers, and also with increasing wavenumber. The tendency of B0 to inhibit development of turbulence is also examined.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Motoaki Saruwatari ◽  
Masa-aki Hashimoto ◽  
Ryohei Fukuda ◽  
Shin-ichiro Fujimoto

We investigate the r-process nucleosynthesis during the magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) explosion of a supernova in a helium star of 3.3 M⊙, where effects of neutrinos are taken into account using the leakage scheme in the two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic code. Jet-like explosion due to the combined effects of differential rotation and magnetic field is able to erode the lower electron fraction matter from the inner layers. We find that the ejected material of low electron fraction responsible for the r-process comes out from just outside the neutrino sphere deep inside the Fe-core. It is found that heavy element nucleosynthesis depends on the initial conditions of rotational and magnetic fields. In particular, the third peak of the distribution is significantly overproduced relative to the solar system abundances, which would indicate a possible r-process site owing to MHD jets in supernovae.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timofey Zinyakov ◽  
Arakel Petrosyan

<p>Numerical studies of two-dimensional β-plane homogeneous magnetohydrodynamic turbulence are presented. The study of the fundamental properties of such turbulence allows understanding the evolution of various astrophysical objects from the Sun and stars to planetary systems, galaxies, and galaxy clusters. Energy spectra and cascade process in two-dimensional β-plane MHD are studied.</p><p>In this work the equations of two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamics with the Coriolis force in the β-plane approximation are used for the qualitative analysis and numerical simulation of processes in plasma astrophysics. The equations are solved on a square box of edge size 2π with periodic boundary conditions applying a the pseudospectral method using the 2/3 rule for dealiasing. The results of numerical simulation of two-dimensional β-plane MHD turbulence with a spatial resolution of 1024 × 1024 and 4096 × 4096 with different Rossby parameters β and different Reynolds numbers are presented.</p><p>It is found that only unsteady zonal flows with complex temporal dynamics are formed in two-dimensional β-plane magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. It is shown that flow nonstationarity is due to the appearance of isotropic magnetic islands caused by the Lorentz force in the system. The formation of Iroshnikov–Kraichnan spectrum is shown in the early stages of evolution of two-dimensional β-plane magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. The self-similarity of the decay of Iroshnikov–Kraichnan spectrum is studied. On long time scale violation of self-similarity of the decay and formation of Kolmogorov spectrum is discovered. The inverse cascade of kinetic energy, which is characteristic of the detected Kolmogorov spectrum, provides the formation of zonal flows.</p><p>This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (project no. 19-02-00016).</p>


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 252-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brent A. Groves ◽  
Jungyeon Cho ◽  
Michael Dopita ◽  
Alex Lazarian

AbstractThe radio–far infrared correlation is one of the tightest correlations found in astronomy. Many of the models explaining this correlation rely on the association of global magnetic field strength with gas density. In this letter we put forward that the physical reason for this association lies within the processes of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence.


1998 ◽  
Vol 358 ◽  
pp. 299-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
OLEG ZIKANOV ◽  
ANDRE THESS

The transformation of initially isotropic turbulent flow of electrically conducting incompressible viscous fluid under the influence of an imposed homogeneous magnetic field is investigated using direct numerical simulation. Under the assumption of large kinetic and small magnetic Reynolds numbers (magnetic Prandtl number Pm[Lt ]1) the quasi-static approximation is applied for the computation of the magnetic field fluctuations. The flow is assumed to be homogeneous and contained in a three-dimensional cubic box with periodic boundary conditions. Large-scale forcing is applied to maintain a statistically steady level of the flow energy. It is found that the pathway traversed by the flow transformation depends decisively on the magnetic interaction parameter (Stuart number). If the magnetic interaction number is small the flow remains three-dimensional and turbulent and no detectable deviation from isotropy is observed. In the case of a strong magnetic field (large magnetic interaction parameter) a rapid transformation to a purely two-dimensional steady state is obtained in agreement with earlier analytical and numerical results for decaying MHD turbulence. At intermediate values of the magnetic interaction parameter the system exhibits intermittent behaviour, characterized by organized quasi-two-dimensional evolution lasting several eddy-turnover times, which is interrupted by strong three-dimensional turbulent bursts. This result implies that the conventional picture of steady angular energy transfer in MHD turbulence must be refined. The spatial structure of the steady two-dimensional final flow obtained in the case of large magnetic interaction parameter is examined. It is found that due to the type of forcing and boundary conditions applied, this state always occurs in the form of a square periodic lattice of alternating vortices occupying the largest possible scale. The stability of this flow to three-dimensional perturbations is analysed using the energy stability method.


2014 ◽  
Vol 761 ◽  
pp. 168-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alban Pothérat ◽  
Rico Klein

AbstractMagnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence at low magnetic Reynolds number is experimentally investigated by studying a liquid metal flow in a cubic domain. We focus on the mechanisms that determine whether the flow is quasi-two-dimensional, three-dimensional or in any intermediate state. To this end, forcing is applied by injecting a DC current $I$ through one wall of the cube only, to drive vortices spinning along the magnetic field. Depending on the intensity of the externally applied magnetic field, these vortices extend part or all of the way through the cube. Driving the flow in this way allows us to precisely control not only the forcing intensity but also its dimensionality. A comparison with the theoretical analysis of this configuration singles out the influences of the walls and of the forcing on the flow dimensionality. Flow dimensionality is characterised in several ways. First, we show that when inertia drives three-dimensionality, the velocity near the wall where current is injected scales as $U_{b}\sim I^{2/3}$. Second, we show that when the distance $l_{z}$ over which momentum diffuses under the action of the Lorentz force (Sommeria & Moreau, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 118, 1982, pp. 507–518) reaches the channel width $h$, the velocity near the opposite wall $U_{t}$ follows a similar law with a correction factor $(1-h/l_{z})$ that measures three-dimensionality. When $l_{z}<h$, by contrast, the opposite wall has less influence on the flow and $U_{t}\sim I^{1/2}$. The central role played by the ratio $l_{z}/h$ is confirmed by experimentally verifying the scaling $l_{z}\sim N^{1/2}$ put forward by Sommeria & Moreau ($N$ is the interaction parameter) and, finally, the nature of the three-dimensionality involved is further clarified by distinguishing weak and strong three-dimensionalities previously introduced by Klein & Pothérat (Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 104 (3), 2010, 034502). It is found that both types vanish only asymptotically in the limit $N\rightarrow \infty$. This provides evidence that because of the no-slip walls, (i) the transition between quasi-two-dimensional and three-dimensional turbulence does not result from a global instability of the flow, unlike in domains with non-dissipative boundaries (Boeck et al. Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 101, 2008, 244501), and (ii) it does not occur simultaneously at all scales.


2018 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoine Briard ◽  
Thomas Gomez

Decaying homogeneous and isotropic magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) turbulence is investigated numerically at large Reynolds numbers thanks to the eddy-damped quasi-normal Markovian (EDQNM) approximation. Without any background mean magnetic field, the total energy spectrum $E$ scales as $k^{-3/2}$ in the inertial range as a consequence of the modelling. Moreover, the total energy is shown, both analytically and numerically, to decay at the same rate as kinetic energy in hydrodynamic isotropic turbulence: this differs from a previous prediction, and thus physical arguments are proposed to reconcile both results. Afterwards, the MHD turbulence is made imbalanced by an initial non-zero cross-helicity. A spectral modelling is developed for the velocity–magnetic correlation in a general homogeneous framework, which reveals that cross-helicity can contain subtle anisotropic effects. In the inertial range, as the Reynolds number increases, the slope of the cross-helical spectrum becomes closer to $k^{-5/3}$ than $k^{-2}$. Furthermore, the Elsässer spectra deviate from $k^{-3/2}$ with cross-helicity at large Reynolds numbers. Regarding the pressure spectrum $E_{P}$, its kinetic and magnetic parts are found to scale with $k^{-2}$ in the inertial range, whereas the part due to cross-helicity rather scales in $k^{-7/3}$. Finally, the two $4/3$rd laws for the total energy and cross-helicity are assessed numerically at large Reynolds numbers.


1976 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Schumann

The transition of homogeneous turbulence from an initially isotropic three-dimensional to a quasi-two-dimensional state is simulated numerically for a conducting, incompressible fluid under a uniform magnetic fieldB0. The magnetic Reynolds number is assumed to be small, so that the induced fluctuations of the magnetic field are small compared with the imposed magnetic fieldB0, and can be computed from a quasi-static approximation. If the imposed magnetic field is strong enough, all variations of the flow field in the direction ofB0are damped out. This effect is important e.g. in the design of liquid-metal cooling systems for fusion reactors, and the properties of the final state are relevant to atmospheric turbulence. An extended version of the code of Orszag & Patterson (1972) is used to integrate the Navier-Stokes equations for an incompressible fluid. The initial hydrodynamic Reynolds number is 60. The magnetic interaction numberNis varied between zero and 50. Periodic boundary conditions are used. The resolution corresponds to 323points in real space. The full nonlinear simulations are compared with otherwise identical linear simulations; the linear results agree with the nonlinear ones within 3% for about one-fifth of the large-scale turnover time. This departure is a consequence of the return-to-equilibrium tendencies caused mainly by energy transfer towards high wavenumbers. The angular energy transfer and the energy exchange between different components are smaller, and become virtually zero for large values ofN. ForN≈ 50 we reach a quasi-two-dimensional state. Here, the energy transfer towards high wavenumbers is reduced for the velocity components perpendicular toB0but relatively increased for the component parallel toB0. The overall behaviour is more similar to three-than to purely two-dimensional turbulence. This finding is of great importance for turbulence models of the atmosphere. The realization of a purely two-dimensional state does not seem to be possible for decaying turbulence. The magnetic field causes highly intensified pressure fluctuations, which contribute to the redistribution of the anisotropic Lorentz forcing.


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