Dynamo effect in a driven helical flow

F. Feudel, M. Gellert, S. Rüdiger, A. Witt, and N. Seehafer
Phys. Rev. E 68, 046302 – Published 8 October 2003
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Abstract

The Roberts flow, a helical flow in the form of convectionlike rolls, is known to be capable of both kinematic and nonlinear dynamo action. We study the Roberts dynamo with particular attention being paid to the spatial structure of the generated magnetic field and its back-reaction on the flow. The dynamo bifurcation is decisively determined by the symmetry group of the problem, which is given by a subgroup of discrete transformations and a continuous translational invariance of the flow. In the bifurcation the continuous symmetry is broken while the discrete subgroup symmetry completely survives. Its actions help in understanding the spatial structures of the magnetic field and of the modified flow. In accordance with experimental observations, the magnetic field component perpendicular to the originally invariant direction is much stronger than the component in this direction. Furthermore, the magnetic field is largely concentrated in layers separating the convectionlike rolls of the flow and containing, in particular, its stagnation points, which are isolated for the modified flow while they are line filling for the original Roberts flow. The magnetic field is strongest near β-type stagnation points, with a two-dimensional unstable and a one-dimensional stable manifold, and is weak near α-type stagnation points, with a two-dimensional stable and a one-dimensional unstable manifold. This contrasts with the usual picture that dynamo action is promoted at the α points and impeded at the β points. Both the creation of isolated stagnation points and the concentration of strong fields at the β points may be understood as a result of the way in which the Roberts dynamo saturates. It is also found that, while the original Roberts flow is regular, the modified flow is chaotic in the layers between the convectionlike rolls where the magnetic field is concentrated. This chaoticity, which results from the back-reaction of the magnetic field on the flow, appears to merely enhance magnetic diffusion rather than to strengthen the dynamo effect.

  • Received 19 May 2003

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.68.046302

©2003 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

F. Feudel1, M. Gellert1, S. Rüdiger2, A. Witt1, and N. Seehafer1

  • 1Institut für Physik, Universität Potsdam, PF 601553, D-14415 Potsdam, Germany
  • 2School of Computational Science and Information Technology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306, USA

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Vol. 68, Iss. 4 — October 2003

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