Geomagnetic acceleration and rapid hydromagnetic wave dynamics in advanced numerical simulations of the geodynamo
Julien Aubert

TL;DR
This study uses advanced numerical simulations to explore Earth's core dynamics, revealing invariant geomagnetic acceleration timescales, variable spatio-temporal properties, and the emergence of hydromagnetic wave phenomena in the geodynamo.
Contribution
It introduces a new simulation path connecting classical models to natural conditions, highlighting the invariance of acceleration timescales and the appearance of hydromagnetic waves in the asymptotic regime.
Findings
Geomagnetic acceleration timescale is about 10 years, invariant along the simulation path.
Rapid rotation regime exhibits two-dimensional columnar flow structures.
Hydromagnetic waves, including torsional and Alfvén waves, are prominent in the asymptotic regime.
Abstract
Geomagnetic secular acceleration is a unique window on the dynamics taking place in Earth's core. In this study, the behaviours of the secular acceleration and underlying core dynamics are examined in new numerical simulations of the geodynamo that reside on a theoretical path in parameter space connecting the region where most classical models are found to the natural conditions. The typical time scale for geomagnetic acceleration is found to be invariant along this path, at a value close to 10 years that matches Earth's core estimates. Despite this invariance, the spatio-temporal properties of secular acceleration show significant variability along the path, with an asymptotic regime of rapid rotation reached after 30% of this path (corresponding to a model Ekman number ). In this regime, the energy of secular acceleration is entirely found at periods longer than that of…
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