Relating force balances and flow length scales in geodynamo simulations
Tobias Schwaiger, Thomas Gastine, Julien Aubert

TL;DR
This paper investigates how flow length scales in geodynamo simulations relate to force balances, identifying key scales that reveal the dominant physical forces and improving understanding of Earth's core dynamics.
Contribution
The study introduces two length scales that are both energetically and dynamically relevant, linking them to specific force balances in geodynamo models.
Findings
Dominant length scale in dynamo models is controlled by QG-MAC balance.
In non-magnetic convection, QG-CIA balance is favored.
Earth's dynamo operates mainly at ~200 km scale with magnetostrophic effects below 50 km.
Abstract
In fluid dynamics, the scaling behaviour of flow length scales is commonly used to infer the governing force balance of a system. The key to a successful approach is to measure length scales that are representative of the energy contained in the solution (energetically relevant) and indicative of the established force balance (dynamically relevant). In numerical simulations of rotating convection and magneto-hydrodynamic dynamos in spherical shells, it has remained difficult to measure length scales that are both energetically and dynamically relevant, which has led to conflicting interpretations of the underlying force balance. By analysing an extensive set of magnetic and non-magnetic models, we focus on two length scales that achieve both energetic and dynamical relevance. The first one is the peak of the poloidal kinetic energy spectrum, which we successfully compare to crossover…
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