4.1 Article

Cross helicity and related dynamo

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL AND ASTROPHYSICAL FLUID DYNAMICS
Volume 107, Issue 1-2, Pages 114-184

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03091929.2012.754022

Keywords

Dynamo; Turbulence; Cross helicity; Transport suppression; Flow generation

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [24540228]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [24540228] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The turbulent cross helicity is directly related to the coupling coefficients for the mean vorticity in the electromotive force and for the mean magnetic-field strain in the Reynolds stress tensor. This suggests that the cross-helicity effects are important in the cases where global inhomogeneous flow and magnetic-field structures are present. Since such large-scale structures are ubiquitous in geo/astrophysical phenomena, the cross-helicity effect is expected to play an important role in geo/astrophysical flows. In the presence of turbulent cross helicity, the mean vortical motion contributes to the turbulent electromotive force. Magnetic-field generation due to this effect is called the cross-helicity dynamo. Several features of the cross-helicity dynamo are introduced. Alignment of the mean electric-current density J with the mean vorticity , as well as the alignment between the mean magnetic field B and velocity U , is supposed to be one of the characteristic features of the dynamo. Unlike the case in the helicity or effect, where J is aligned with B in the turbulent electromotive force, we in general have a finite mean-field Lorentz force J x B in the cross-helicity dynamo. This gives a distinguished feature of the cross-helicity effect. By considering the effects of cross helicity in the momentum equation, we see several interesting consequences of the effect. Turbulent cross helicity coupled with the mean magnetic shear reduces the effect of turbulent or eddy viscosity. Flow induction is an important consequence of this effect. One key issue in the cross-helicity dynamo is to examine how and how much cross helicity can be present in turbulence. On the basis of the cross-helicity transport equation, its production mechanisms are discussed. Some recent developments in numerical validation of the basic notion of the cross-helicity dynamo are also presented.

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