Saturation of Zeldovich Stretch-Twist-Fold Map Dynamos

Abstract

Zeldovich's stretch-twist fold (STF) dynamo provided a breakthrough in conceptual understanding of fast dynamos, including fluctuation or small scale dynamos. We study the evolution and saturation behaviour of two types of Baker's map dynamos, which have been used to model Zeldovich's STF dynamo process. Using such maps allows one to analyze dynamos at much higher magnetic Reynolds numbers RM as compared to direct numerical simulations. In the 2-strip map dynamo there is constant constructive folding while the 4-strip map dynamo also allows the possibility of field reversal. Incorporating a diffusive step parameterised by RM, we find that the magnetic field B(x) is amplified only above a critical RM=Rcrit 4 for both types of dynamos. We explore the saturation of these dynamos in 3 ways; by a renormalized decrease of the effective RM (Case I) or due to a decrease in the efficiency of field amplification by stretching (Case II), or a combination of both effects (Case III). For Case I, we show that B(x) in the saturated state, for both types of maps, goes back to the marginal eigenfunction, which is obtained for the critical RM=Rcrit. This is independent of the initial RM=RM0. On the other hand in Case II, for the 2-strip map, we show that B(x) now saturates preserving the structure of the kinematic eigenfunction. Thus the energy is transferred to larger scales in Case I but remains at the smallest resistive scales in Case II. For the 4-strip map, the B(x) oscillates with time, although with a structure similar to the kinematic eigenfunction. Interestingly, the saturated state for Case III shows an intermediate behaviour, with B(x) now similar to the kinematic eigenfunction for an intermediate RM=Rsat, with RM0>Rsat>Rcrit. These saturation properties are akin to the ones discussed in the context of fluctuation dynamos.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…