Surface flux concentrations and spherical alpha-square dynamo
Sarah Jabbari (1,2), Axel Brandenburg (1,2), Nathan Kleeorin (3,1),, Dhrubaditya Mitra (1), Igor Rogachevskii (3,1) ((1) NORDITA, (2) Stockholm, Univ. (3) Ben-Gurion Univ)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the negative effective magnetic pressure instability (NEMPI) interacts with a self-generated alpha^2 dynamo in a strongly stratified spherical shell, revealing conditions for flux concentration and dynamo modulation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that NEMPI can operate with a self-consistently generated dynamo field in spherical geometry, affecting flux concentrations and dynamo behavior.
Findings
NEMPI occurs when the dynamo field reaches about 4% of equipartition value.
NEMPI is excited in the outer 5% of the radius with sufficient density contrast.
Weaker fields can induce oscillatory dynamo behavior with poleward migration.
Abstract
In the presence of strong density stratification, turbulence can lead to a large-scale instability of a horizontal magnetic field if its strength is in a suitable range (within a few percent of the turbulent equipartition value). This instability is related to a suppression of the turbulent pressure so that the turbulence contribution to the mean magnetic pressure becomes negative. This results in the excitation of a negative effective magnetic pressure instability (NEMPI). This instability has so far only been studied for an imposed magnetic field. We want to know how NEMPI works when the mean magnetic field is generated self-consistently by an dynamo, whether it is affected by global spherical geometry, and whether it can influence the properties of the dynamo itself. We adopt the mean-field approach which has previously been shown to provide a realistic description of…
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