Chiral fermion asymmetry in high-energy plasma simulations
Jennifer Schober, Axel Brandenburg, Igor Rogachevskii

TL;DR
This paper investigates the implementation and effects of the chiral magnetic effect (CME) in high-energy plasma simulations, revealing its role in magnetic field evolution, dynamo action, and wave propagation in early Universe conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a new implementation of CME in the PENCIL CODE and explores its impact on magnetic field amplification and wave dynamics in high-energy plasmas.
Findings
Chiral dynamo can amplify magnetic fields over many orders of magnitude.
CME induces a dynamo effect similar to the alpha effect but operates without turbulence.
Chiral magnetic waves are confirmed to be non-interacting with MHD waves.
Abstract
The chiral magnetic effect (CME) is a quantum relativistic effect that describes the appearance of an additional electric current along a magnetic field. It is caused by an asymmetry between the number densities of left- and right-handed fermions, which can be maintained at high energies when the chirality flipping rate can be neglected, for example in the early Universe. The inclusion of the CME in the Maxwell equations leads to a modified set of MHD equations. We discuss how the CME is implemented in the PENCIL CODE. The CME plays a key role in the evolution of magnetic fields since it results in a dynamo effect associated with an additional term in the induction equation. This term is formally similar to the effect in classical mean-field MHD. However, the chiral dynamo can operate without turbulence and is associated with small spatial scales that can be, in the case of the…
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