Limits on Magnetic Field Amplification from the r-Mode Instability
John L. Friedman, Lee Lindblom, Luciano Rezzolla, and Andrey I., Chugunov

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limits of magnetic field amplification caused by the r-mode instability in rotating stars, concluding that for small mode amplitudes, magnetic growth is insufficient to damp or significantly alter the instability.
Contribution
It provides a new upper limit on magnetic field growth due to r-modes, considering realistic neutron star models and small mode amplitudes, contrasting with previous larger-amplitude assumptions.
Findings
Magnetic field growth is limited by the saturation amplitude of r-modes.
For small amplitudes (~10^-4), magnetic amplification cannot damp the instability.
Results suggest stability of r-modes in neutron stars with normal or superconducting interiors.
Abstract
At second order in perturbation theory, the unstable r-mode of a rotating star includes growing differential rotation whose form and growth rate are determined by gravitational-radiation reaction. With no magnetic field, the angular velocity of a fluid element grows exponentially until the mode reaches its nonlinear saturation amplitude and remains nonzero after saturation. With a background magnetic field, the differential rotation winds up and amplifies the field, and previous work where large mode amplitudes were considered suggests that the amplification may damp out the instability. A background magnetic field, however, turns the saturated time-independent perturbations corresponding to adding differential rotation into perturbations whose characteristic frequencies are of order the Alfv\'en frequency. As found in previous studies, we argue that magnetic- field growth is sharply…
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