Galactic winds and the origin of large-scale magnetic fields
David Moss, Dmitri Sokoloff

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new mechanism for large-scale magnetic field formation in dwarf galaxies, involving small-scale dynamos and galactic winds, supported by simplified numerical models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel explanation for large-scale magnetic fields in small galaxies without mean-field dynamo action, supported by 2D numerical models.
Findings
Large-scale magnetic patterns can form in galactic halos.
The mechanism is effective across various dynamo parameters.
Models suggest the trend persists in full 3D simulations.
Abstract
Observations of dwarf galaxies suggest the presence of large-scale magnetic fields. However the size and slow rotation of these galaxies appear insufficient to support a mean-field dynamo action to excite such fields. Here we suggest a new mechanism to explain large-scale magnetic fields in galaxies that are too small to support mean-field dynamo action. The key idea is that we do not identify large-scale and mean magnetic fields. In our scenario the the magnetic structures originate from a small-scale dynamo which produces small-scale magnetic field in the galactic disc and a galactic wind that transports this field into the galactic halo where the large turbulent diffusion increases the scale and order of the field. As a result, the magnetic field becomes large-scale; however its mean value remains vanishing in a strict sense. We verify the idea by numerical modelling of two distinct…
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