2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session L6: Earth and Space Magneto-Fluid Dynamics
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Room: 406
Sponsoring
Unit:
DFD
Chair: John Hawley, University of Virginia
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.L6.3
Abstract: L6.00003 : Fluid Mechanics of the Geodynamo
3:42 PM–4:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Peter Olson
(Johns Hopkins)
Fluid dynamical processes in the molten, iron-rich, electrically conducting core
sustain Earth's magnetic field. Convection driven by secular cooling and chemical
differentiation is the primary energy source for the geodynamo. Earth's rotation
imparts helicity to the convection, which amplifies the geomagnetic field, balancing
losses from Ohmic dissipation. Both the Ekman and Rossby numbers are very small
in the outer core, so the convection is partly aligned with the planetary spin axis,
which tends to orient the geomagnetic dipole axis in the north-south direction. The
magnetic Reynolds number in the outer core is about 20 times the critical value for
sustained dynamo action and the Reynolds number is about $10^7$, implying
turbulent conditions. Fluctuations in the turbulence induce continuous changes in
the geomagnetic field, including occasional polarity reversals. Geomagnetic polarity
reversals have occurred about once every 250 kyr on average over the past 5 Myr,
the last reversal occurred around 780 ka and there have been several long constant-
polarity superchrons. The axial dipole collapses before a reversal, exposing the
complex non-dipolar transition field, then the axial dipole is regenerated in the
opposite polarity, the entire process lasting 10-20 kyr. Spontaneous polarity
reversals have been observed in at least one liquid sodium dynamo experiment.
Downward-extrapolated measurements from Earth-orbiting satellites reveal the
axial dipole comes mostly from a few high-latitude concentrated flux spots on the
core boundary. About 15\% of the core boundary has reversed-direction magnetic
field, mostly in the southern hemisphere. Proliferation and growth of reversed flux
regions are major reasons why the axial dipole is in decline, decreasing at 10 times
its free decay rate and suggesting (to some) that the geomagnetic field may be in
early stage of a polarity reversal.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.L6.3