Variability modes in core flows inverted from geomagnetic field models
Alexandra Pais (CGUC), Anna Morozova (CGUC), Nathana\"el Schaeffer

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes the main variability modes of Earth's core flows over centennial timescales using geomagnetic field models, revealing robust circulation patterns linked to core dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a method to extract and validate core flow variability modes from geomagnetic models, demonstrating their robustness and relevance to Earth's core behavior.
Findings
Three main circulation modes identified, consistent across models.
Mode 2 correlates with Earth's core angular momentum variations.
Main modes account for about 70% of flow variability.
Abstract
The flow of liquid metal inside the Earth's core produces the geomagnetic field and its time variations. Understanding the variability of those deep currents is crucial to improve the forecast of geomagnetic field variations, which affect human spacial and aeronautic activities. Moreover, it may provide relevant information on the core dynamics. The main goal of this study is to extract and characterize the leading variability modes of core flows over centennial periods, and to assess their statistical robustness. To this end, we use flows that we invert from two geomagnetic field models (gufm1 and COV-OBS), and apply Principal Component Analysis and Singular Value Decomposition of coupled fields. The quasi geostrophic (QG) flows inverted from both geomagnetic field models show similar features. However, COV-OBS has a less energetic mean and larger time variability. The statistical…
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