# Some consequences of shear on galactic dynamos with helicity fluxes

**Authors:** Hongzhe Zhou, Eric G. Blackman

arXiv: 1702.03560 · 2017-05-31

## TL;DR

This paper extends galactic dynamo models by incorporating shear effects on turbulence energy and correlation time, revealing how shear influences magnetic field saturation and helicity fluxes in galaxy evolution.

## Contribution

It introduces an analytic framework accounting for shear impacts on turbulence and helicity fluxes, including magnetic buoyancy, with comparisons to rotation-only models.

## Key findings

- Shear significantly reduces turbulence correlation time at low Rossby numbers.
- Magnetic buoyancy can sustain helicity fluxes without winds or diffusion.
- Shear effects alter dynamo saturation levels depending on turbulence timescales.

## Abstract

Galactic dynamo models sustained by supernova (SN) driven turbulence and differential rotation have revealed that the sustenance of large scale fields requires a flux of small scale magnetic helicity to be viable. Here we generalize a minimalist analytic version of such galactic dynamos to explore some heretofore unincluded contributions from shear on the total turbulent energy and turbulent correlation time, with the helicity fluxes maintained by either winds, diffusion, or magnetic buoyancy. We construct an analytic framework for modeling the turbulent energy and correlation time as functions of SN rate and shear. We compare our prescription with previous approaches that only include rotation. The solutions depend separately on the rotation period and the eddy turnover time and not just on their ratio (the Rossby number). We consider models in which these two time scales are allowed to be independent and also a case in which they are mutually dependent on radius when a radial dependent SN rate model is invoked. For the case of a fixed rotation period (or fixed radius) we show that the influence of shear is dramatic for low Rossby numbers, reducing the correlation time of the turbulence, which in turn, strongly reduces the saturation value of the dynamo compared to the case when the shear is ignored. We also show that even in the absence of winds or diffusive fluxes, magnetic buoyancy may be able to sustain sufficient helicity fluxes to avoid quenching.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03560/full.md

## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03560/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.03560