On the resilience of helical magnetic fields to turbulent diffusion and the astrophysical implications
Eric G. Blackman (U. Rochester), Kandaswamy Subramanian (IUCAA)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how large-scale helical magnetic fields resist turbulent diffusion, revealing that their decay depends on their energy ratio to turbulence and has significant implications for astrophysical magnetic field theories.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of the decay rates of helical magnetic fields in turbulent systems, highlighting conditions for their longevity and implications for dynamo theories.
Findings
Helical magnetic fields decay slowly if their energy ratio exceeds a critical value.
Non-helical fields rapidly decay due to turbulent diffusion.
Long-lived helical fields do not necessarily dominate kinetic energy in astrophysical systems.
Abstract
The extent to which large scale magnetic fields are susceptible to turbulent diffusion is important for interpreting the need for in situ large scale dynamos in astrophysics and for observationally inferring field strengths compared to kinetic energy. By solving coupled equations for magnetic energy and magnetic helicity in a system initiated with isotropic turbulence and an arbitrarily helical large scale field, we quantify the decay rate of the latter for a bounded or periodic system. The energy associated with the non-helical magnetic field rapidly decays by turbulent diffusion, but the decay rate of the helical component depends on whether the ratio of its magnetic energy to the turbulent kinetic energy exceeds a critical value given by M_{1,c} =(k_1/k_2)^2, where k_1 and k_2 are the wave numbers of the large and forcing scales. Turbulently diffusing helical fields to small scales…
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