Cosmic ray current-driven turbulence and mean-field dynamo effect
Igor Rogachevskii (1,2), Nathan Kleeorin (1,2), Axel Brandenburg, (2,3), David Eichler (1) ((1) Ben-Gurion Univ, (2) NORDITA, (3) Stockholm, Univ)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how cosmic ray streaming induces turbulence that drives a mean-field dynamo effect, leading to large-scale magnetic field amplification in astrophysical shocks, supported by numerical simulations.
Contribution
It reveals the role of Bell instability-driven turbulence in generating an alpha effect and large-scale magnetic fields, combining theoretical analysis with direct numerical simulations.
Findings
Bell instability produces small-scale turbulence.
Large-scale magnetic structures form during the instability.
Magnetic field amplification is significant but limited by shock expansion.
Abstract
We show that an alpha effect is driven by the cosmic ray Bell instability exciting left-right asymmetric turbulence. Alfven waves of a preferred polarization have maximally helical motion, because the transverse motion of each mode is parallel to its curl. We show how large-scale Alfven modes, when rendered unstable by cosmic ray streaming, can create new net flux over any finite region, in the direction of the original large-scale field. We perform direct numerical simulations (DNS) of an MHD fluid with a forced cosmic ray current and use the test-field method to determine the alpha effect and the turbulent magnetic diffusivity. As follows from DNS, the dynamics of the instability has the following stages: (i) in the early stage, the small-scale Bell instability that results in a production of small-scale turbulence is excited; (ii) in the intermediate stage, there is formation of…
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